City seeks 'vitality' in branding campaign
Mayor claims newspaper erred in Juneteenth discussion account
By AMBER PERRY amber@appenmedia.com
JOHNS CREEK, Ga. — The Johns Creek Vitality Committee has been tasked with efforts to cement a health and wellness brand for the city, but its path forward is still up in the air.
Formerly called the iHeart Johns Creek Advisory Committee, Johns Creek created the group in 2020 to promote the city’s image as a healthcare, wellness and innovation destination.
Since August 2022, the Vitality Committee has participated in special events like the International Festival, Trunk or Treat, the Diwali Festival and the Arts Festival where members surveyed visitors, distributing fliers and branded merchandise. A more recent development, led by the committee, is the inaugural 5K run at Cauley Creek Park.
But there was consensus among the City Council at both the March 14 work session, and at the January strategic planning retreat, that the group needs more structure and pointed direction.
City Councilman Bob Erramilli noted that committee attendance has been sparse. Only four of its 11 members showed up in February, he said.
“It seems to me that if there is some great purpose for that organization, they will be motivated to show up there,” Erramilli said.
Finding staff support
Since the retreat, the committee has received more support from city staff through Economic Development Manager Randall Toussaint. While Johns Creek Mayor John Bradberry suggested the committee continue working with Toussaint, others said his existing responsibilities are a greater priority.
See BRANDING, Page 19
Johns Creek considers plan for task force on elections
Roswell scraps effort to conduct ’23 polling
By AMBER PERRY amber@appenmedia.com
JOHNS CREEK, Ga. — Roswell officials have decided to stick with Fulton County to run its municipal elections this November, adding to the list of area cities abandoning efforts to operate their own polling.
Johns Creek, the first out of a North Fulton group to make the same move, has begun scoping logistics for setting up self-run municipal elections in 2025.
So far, Milton is the only North Fulton city that has formally adopted plans to operate its own municipal elections this November. In the first year, Milton has estimated $72,254 in costs for two polling locations on election day.
Sandy Springs has no council posts or referendums scheduled for this year.
Sparked by Milton’s decision in December to wrest control of its own city elections from the county, other cities across north Metro Atlanta have been exploring the idea over the past two months.
Johns
objectives
work session March 14.
Discussion has centered around
See ELECTIONS, Page 18
March 23, 2023 | AppenMedia.com | An Appen Media Group Publication | 50¢ | Volume 27, No. 12
AMBER PERRY/APPEN MEDIA
Creek City Councilman Bob Erramilli discusses potential
for the Johns Creek Vitality Committee at a council
NEWS TIPS
POLICE BLOTTER
770-442-3278
AppenMedia.com
319 N. Main Street
Alpharetta, GA 30009
HANS APPEN
Publisher RAY APPEN
Publisher Emeritus
CONTACT
Contact reporters directly or send story ideas to newsroom@appenmedia.com.
LETTERS, EVENTS AND ANNOUNCEMENTS
Send your letters, events and community news to newsroom@appenmedia.com. See appenmedia.com/submit for more guidance.
ADVERTISING
For information about advertising in the Johns Creek Herald or other Appen Media properties, email advertising@appenmedia.com or call 770-442-3278.
CIRCULATION
To start, pause or stop delivery of this newspaper, email circulation@appenmedia.com or call 770-442-3278
Man extorted for $180 after sending pictures
JOHNS CREEK, Ga. — A man informed Johns Creek Police March 6 he was being extorted for sending an intimate photo of himself to a “woman” on Instagram.
The man, who lives in an apartment off Addison Lane, told police that within the past hour, he had a chat on Instagram, during which he sent two photos, one of his face and another more revealing.
He said he received a message stating if he did not give them $100, the photos would be distributed. The man said he sent two separate Zelle payments, one $100 payment to one person and another $80 payment to another individual.
The man said he wanted to report the incident because he was afraid he would get into trouble. He asked the contact if she was 18 years old and what age was the appropriate age to remain legal. The man said the contact told him she was 18 years old.
The man said he blocked the suspect from sending him any further messages.
Personal checks altered for different amounts
JOHNS CREEK, Ga. — A woman reported to Johns Creek Police March 6 that on Feb. 27 someone wrote a check on her account for $1,100.25.
The check was written to her bank, Navigant Credit Union, at a branch in Florida.
A second transaction occurred March 6 in the amount of $7,500. The woman said
the second check was a check she wrote. However, it was originally made out for $40 and mailed through the U.S. Postal Service Feb. 11.
The check was dropped off at the Publix mail drop off on State Bridge Road with another person’s name on the check. The check number was not valid, the police report said.
It appeared the check had been "cleaned," the report said, and the thief wrote their information on it.
The woman said she did not authorize the amounts, and the checks had been altered.
Thief steals belongings from man’s gym locker
JOHNS CREEK, Ga. — A man reported to Johns Creek Police March 9 that someone stole his belongings from a locker at Lifetime Fitness off Lakefield Drive.
The man said he arrived at the gym at 1 p.m. and went into the locker room to secure his belongings in a locker. He said he went to the lockers closest to the pool entrance, and that there was a young man and an older man getting dressed in that area.
The victim said he was about to move to another section of the locker room when the younger man told him that he was welcome to use the same set of lockers.
The victim said he placed his clothes, an iPhone 12 pro max, Galaxy Note 8 and his wallet containing his Georgia driver’s license, house and car keys, debit and credit cards and a health insurance card inside the locker. He then locked the locker with a personalized code and scrambled the dial, the police report said.
The man said he left the area and went to the pool. Upon returning to his locker, the victims said he discovered his locker had been raided.
The man called police, and gym management searched the area to ensure the victim hadn’t mistakenly placed his items in another locker. They
also checked trash cans and turned up nothing.
There were no cameras in the locker room, but management was in the process of checking cameras to see if anyone left the locker room with the man’s polo gym bag.
Management told police no one could have accessed the locker without a master key or knowing the victim’s personalized combination.
Police learned from footage that the young man the victim had spoken with in the locker room was a former employee of a Lifetime Fitness at a different location.
Management couldn’t provide the suspect’s personal information at the time.
2 | March 23, 2023 | Johns Creek Herald | AppenMedia.com/Johns_Creek PUBLIC SAFETY
Honored as a newspaper of General Excellence 2018
2022
Is Your Company Hiring? Submit your opening at appenmedia.com/hire
Then imagine the number of other readers that noticed it too! Advertise your products and services in our newspapers and get noticed by our 262,500 readers every week in North Atlanta.* CONTACT YOUR MEDIA REPRESENTATIVE TODAY! 770-442-3278 Did this ad catch your eye? *Based on total circulation of 93,000 homes delivered 2.5 readers per home (newspaper industry standard). 319 North Main Street, Alpharetta, GA 30009 | AppenMedia.com
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.
AppenMedia.com/Johns_Creek | Johns Creek Herald | March 23, 2023 | 3
Northview High School presents Interschool Genetics Symposium
By SHELBY ISRAEL shelby@appenmedia.com
JOHNS CREEK, Ga. — More than 50 students, parents and residents gathered at the Johns Creek Chamber of Commerce for a student-led Interschool Genetics Symposium March 18.
The event, hosted by the Northview High School Genetics Engineering Club, aimed to create awareness of careers in genetics and science, technology, engineering and mathematics – or STEM.
Club founder and President Vaishali Prahalad said she and the club organized the event to interest students in STEM by showcasing how a future in the fields could look. The symposium featured a Q&A session with three professionals in medicine and genetics.
Prahalad said she had been conceiving the symposium for months, and the club had worked hard to put it together.
“Being able to share what we have put together was really, really meaningful and powerful,” Prahalad said. “And I hope that in the future, we will keep continuing to get people to commit and dedicate themselves toward science.”
The panel included 10X Genomics Science and Technology Advisor Nirav Patel, Emory University School of Medicine genetic counselor Lauren Lichten and Children’s Healthcare of Atlanta Pediatric Rheumatology Fellow Dr. Christian Oliveros. All fielded questions from students and parents on internships, opportunities and how to get started in STEM fields.
Johns Creek Mayor John Bradberry, who inaugurated the event, said life science and biosciences have a strong and growing presence in the city.
“I feel like this is a very
auspicious occasion,” Bradberry said, “because, you know, basically what this represents to me is that our community, especially at the student level, is hand in glove with what we're attempting to do at the city level.”
Bradberry said Boston Scientific is coming to the Town Center’s Innovation Hub later this year, and the city will repurpose the water reclamation plant at Cauley Creek Park into a STEM playground this summer.
“That is something that, whether it's going to be robotics or something related to art or engineering, that is going to be a place that, of course, you can enjoy the fun parts of the park,” Bradberry said. “But there,
you'll be able to actually have a space where you can pursue your extracurricular intellectual endeavors as well.”
Greg Hampikian, founder of the Idaho Innocence Project, presented via Zoom on the use of genetics in exoneration efforts in Georgia and across the country.
The event concluded with a student-led interactive game in which participants used their phones to design a baby using CRISPR, a genome editing technology. Students in the Genetics Engineering Club also shared recent projects.
Students interested in starting a genetics engineering club at their school can reach Prahalad at vaishali. prahalad@gmail.com for more information.
GARAGE SALES
4 | March 23, 2023 | Johns Creek Herald | AppenMedia.com/Johns_Creek NEWS
more garage sales in the classifieds ALPHARETTA, 250 Clark Drive 30004. Friday 3/24 and Saturday 3/25, 9AM4PM. Over 40 years of homesteading with lots of vintage and antiques, and tools DEADLINE
place garage sale ads: Noon Friday. Call 770-442-3278 or email classifieds@appenmediagroup.com
See
To
PHOTOS BY SHELBY ISRAEL/APPEN MEDIA
From left, panelists Nirav Patel, Lauren Lichten and Dr. Christian Oliveros answer student and parent questions at Northview High School Genetics Engineering Club’s Interschool Genetics Symposium at the Johns Creek Chamber of Commerce March 18.
Johns Creek Mayor John Bradberry speaks at Northview High School Genetics Engineering Club’s Interschool Genetics Symposium at the Johns Creek Chamber of Commerce March 18. Bradberry inaugurated the event and recognized the growing STEM industry in Johns Creek.
AppenMedia.com/Johns_Creek | Johns Creek Herald | March 23, 2023 | 5
PEXELS
Daffodil Days in Johns Creek celebrates local connections
JOHNS CREEK, Ga. — Symbolizing new beginnings in a caring community, Daffodil Days encourages community participation through a week-long giveback and volunteer effort.
The campaign runs March 19-25 with a market from 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. at Johns Creek City Hall. The market will feature more than 70 artisans in The Gibson Co. market, family-friendly and kids’ activities, food trucks, a flower arranging cart and more.
Giving back connects residents and strengthens bonds, which can make a positive impact on the
community. Residents, business owners and organizations can apply with a “give-back action” idea. Some examples include raising funds for local nonprofits, Girl Scout Troop bake sales and crocheting blankets for cancer patients.
Approved applicants then spend the week of March 19-25 executing their give-back action. All city-approved giveback and volunteer events and activities will be recognized at the Daffodil Day Market March 25.
Visit johnscreekga.gov to submit an idea.
Johns Creek nonprofit announces list of artists for Secret Garden Tour
By SHELBY ISRAEL shelby@appenmedia.com
JOHNS CREEK, Ga. — Johns Creek Beautification announced its list of artists and musicians for the Secret Garden Tour May 6 from 9 a.m.-5 p.m. at Autrey Mill Nature Preserve. Each garden on the tour will include a musical ensemble or solo performer and visual artists. The tour costs $30 for those who purchase a pass before April. Tickets then go to $35.
Proceeds from the tour support public art in Johns Creek, as well as a citywide daffodil planting used to raise awareness of cancer survivors. Proceeds will also honor veterans by planting daffodils in Newtown Park
The organization announced 17 visual artists who will be featured at the gardens, including Julie Jennings, Debra and Don Yaun, Deb Snow, Kathy de Cano, Marie Brumbach, Madeline Reamy, Tammy Josephson, Karen Mayer Johnston, Joan Zell, Patricia Fabian, Kelly Cook, Alexis Avery, Tatiana Mack, Catalina Gomez-Beuth, Eileen Bodamer and Eric Strauss.
“Knowing some of the volunteers who make this event possible and the hard work involved, I am happy to be involved, even in some small way to share my botanical-themed work and processes with the attendees this year,” Josephson said. “The gardens are stunning, and the added art and cultural presentations are icing on the cake.”
Brumbach, a watercolor and acrylic flowers artist, said she hopes her participation helps to raise funds to support the organization’s
beautification efforts in the city. The tour will feature music performances by the Musik21 Music Conservatory, Southern Manor Strings, the William Pu School of Music, the Johns Creek High School Orchestra, the Alpharetta Symphony Orchestra, Mark and Sallie Spain, Randy Rosenthal, the Vivo Music and Arts Academy and Katie G Vocalist. Tickets and more information are at johnscreekbeautification.org/secretgarden-tour.html.
6 | March 23, 2023 | Johns Creek Herald | AppenMedia.com/Johns_Creek NEWS facebook.com/JohnsCreekHerald WANT MORE? FOLLOW US ON
FILE PHOTO
AppenMedia.com/Johns_Creek | Johns Creek Herald | March 23, 2023 | 7
Johns Creek Herald | March 23, 2023
Alpharetta Bee Company makes sweet deals
By SHELBY ISRAEL shelby@appenmedia.com
ALPHARETTA, Ga. — Deborah Eves and Michael Buchanan bonded over a shared love of nature, but their passion for beekeeping and business started when they founded the Alpharetta Bee Company in 2021.
Buchanan and Eves started their backyard venture after a year of learning the ropes of beekeeping, and it first launched as The Sunny Honey Company.
“We started Sunny Honey Company, and we got into the Alpharetta Farmers Market, and we’re like wow, it was amazing how much people love honey,” Eves said. “Then the next year, which was last year before the farmers market started, we said, ‘Well, gosh, nobody realizes that we’re actually local Alpharetta beekeepers,’ so we changed our name to Alpharetta Bee Company.”
Eves and Buchanan feed, house and care for their Italian and Carniolan bees in their backyards on Pebble Trail. They also have hives at Buchanan’s cabin in Cleveland, where they produce their sourwood and mountain wildflower honey.
Buchanan said they learned best practices from a friend in Milton and from a neighbor in Cleveland with 35 years of beekeeping experience. The pair studied YouTube videos and purchased equipment in 2020, and the following year, they were ready to launch.
“It’s not something you can kind of stick your toe in the water about,” Buchanan said. “You’re either in it or you’re not.”
The process Buchanan said much of the process is common sense, but it is also hard work. He said it is important to feed the bees and keep them healthy for the period that they have no nectar, which is 60-70 percent of the year.
The two expect to have 12 or 13 hives in 2023, and Buchanan said one
good hive can produce up to 70 pounds of honey.
“They’ve been around since the time of the dinosaurs, so they know what to do,” Buchanan said.
When the honey is ready to be harvested, Eves and Buchanan filter it from their extractor into containers. The honey is raw and never heated or
pasteurized, they said, and nothing is added.
Eves also uses the beeswax from their hives in candles and lotion, which is made with coconut oil and shea butter.
Working as a duo, Eves said, allows them to bounce ideas off one
See BEE, Page 9
8 |
SHELBY ISRAEL/APPEN MEDIA
Michael Buchanan and Deborah Eves farm, package and sell honey out of their homes on Pebble Trail in Alpharetta March 15. The couple started Alpharetta Bee Company in 2021 as The Sunny Honey Company.
It’s not something you can kind of stick your toe in the water about.You’re either in it or you’re not.
MICHAEL BUCHANAN, co-founder, Alpharetta Bee Co.
Bee:
Continued from Page 8
another to find the best ways to run their business, and the bees are like their coworkers, rather than their employees.
A business with a mission
Alpharetta Bee Company served the couple as more than a business venture. Buchanan is a retired teacher, and Eves works as a substitute teacher at the Fulton County Schools Innovation Academy in Alpharetta.
Eves said two of her students want to learn about beekeeping and entrepreneurship, and this summer, they will help the couple at their Alpharetta Farmers Market booth.
“We’re going to train them to work at the market with us so that when one of us is gone, the other one that’s there will have somebody to help,” Eves said. “We’re super excited about it. They’re so cute.”
The company is also passionate about “bees, trees and seas,” and they said they hope to educate others and create awareness about saving the environment.
“We have information at the booth, and we have tasters so they can taste it,” Buchanan said. “They’re not just
buying it blindly, and we let them try some of the sourwood, wildflower, whatever. We try to teach people about beekeeping and how mosquito spraying in the yard is not really good for the bees.”
Besides beekeeping, Buchanan is an artist, writer and filmmaker, and he searches the West and Southeast for fossils and shark teeth. He said he enjoys sharing his findings with children at the farmers market.
“We just like to talk to people,” Eves said. “We have pictures of us in our beekeeping suits at the market, and we found that a lot of people love to talk about bees. And if people want to bring their kids over and visit the beehives, we encourage that as well.”
Looking back and ahead
Before the success of Alpharetta Bee Company, Eves and Buchanan had to face the challenges of obtaining a license, paying sales taxes and covering expenses as new business owners.
“To me, the bumpiest thing is the fact that you’re totally dependent upon the bees to help you do this,” Buchanan said. “If we lose a couple of hives, whatever, then it cuts back on product and things like that. We do the best we can, but still the bees have the final vote on how everything’s going to work, and we cannot control that.”
While the pair are still expanding
Alpharetta Bee Company sells wildflower, sourwood and clover honey, as well as creamed and infused varieties March 15. Owner Deborah Eves also makes lotion and candles with beeswax, and co-owner Michael Buchanan painted bees that the couple sell on handcrafted note cards.
their online presence and navigating the farmers market off-season, Eves said the business allows her to do the things she loves, and she is satisfied with the size and the market of the company.
“We don’t want it to get to where it’s just a job,” Buchanan said. “We still want it to be a business that makes us happy, not one that takes over our lives.”
Buchanan and Eves hope to expand
their honey varieties in the future, and they plan to sell children’s books related to beekeeping and nature soon.
Alpharetta Bee Company is at the Alpharetta Farmers Market Saturdays 8:30 a.m.-12:30 p.m. April 1-Oct. 31 and Saturdays 9:30 a.m.-12:30 p.m. in November. The company will also set up at the Alpharetta Christmas Market in December,
The company’s online shop is at alpharettabeeco.com/.
AppenMedia.com/Johns_Creek | Johns Creek Herald | March 23, 2023 | 9 BUSINESSPOSTS YOUR SAFETY IS OUR TOP PRIORITY The health and safety of our customers, associates and services providers is our top priority, and we’re continuing to take extra precautions. Visit homedepot.com/hscovidsafety for more information about how we are responding to COVID-19. Home Depot local Service Providers are background checked, insured, licensed and/or registered. License or registration numbers held by or on behalf of Home Depot U.S.A., Inc. are available at homedepot.com/licensenumbers or at the Special Services Desk in The Home Depot store. State specific licensing information includes: AL 51289, 1924; AK 25084; AZ ROC252435, ROC092581; AR 0228160520; CA 602331; CT HIC.533772; DC 420214000109, 410517000372; FL CRC046858, CGC1514813; GA RBCO005730, GCCO005540; HI CT-22120; ID RCE-19683; IA C091302; LA 43960, 557308, 883162; MD 85434, 42144; MA 112785, CS-107774; MI 2101089942, 2102119069; MN BC147263; MS 22222-MC; MT 37730; NE 26085; NV 38686; NJ 13VH09277500; NM 86302; NC 31521; ND 29073; OR 95843; The Home Depot U.S.A., Inc. is a Registered General Contractor in Rhode Island and its Registration Number is 9480; SC GLG110120; TN 47781; UT 286936-5501; VA 2705-068841; WA HOMED088RH; WV WV036104; WI 1046796. ©2020 Home Depot Product Authority, LLC. All rights reserved. *production time takes approximately 6-8 weeks. HDIE20K0022A CUSTOM HOME ORGANIZATION Solutions for every room in your home Custom Design High-quality, furniture-grade product customized to your space, style, and budget. Complimentary Consultation We offer complimentary design consultations with 3D renderings Quick 1-3 Day Install* Enjoy your new, organized space in as little as 1-3 days. Affordable Financing We offer multiple financing options to make your project affordable [on a monthly basis]. HOMEDEPOT.COM/MYHOMEORGINSTALL 770-744-2034 Call or visit for your FREE IN-HOME OR VIRTUAL CONSULTATION Hello there, Our local team is based in your area. We’d like to provide you with a free in-home or virtual Custom Home Organization consultation and quote. Frank Paras Home Depot Installation Services Local Team Leader Tara Tucker
SHELBY ISRAEL/APPEN MEDIA
Milton High grad stars in Broadway’s ‘Wicked’
By DELANEY TARR delaney@appenmedia.com
MILTON, Ga. — Milton High School graduate McKenzie Kurtz has filled a childhood dream as she starts her run as Glinda in the award-winning musical “Wicked.”
Kurtz debuted in the role Feb. 14 at the Gershwin Theatre on Broadway as the musical enters its 20th year.
“I have dreamt of being in this show, specifically playing Glinda since I saw it for the first time when I was 9 years old,” Kurtz said.
Watching that performance years ago was part of what spurred Kurtz to pursue musical theater. Few shows run for as long as “Wicked,” though.
“I remember being like ‘Please let this show be around when I make it to New York’ and of course it was, because it’s one of the most insane and amazing shows of all time,” Kurtz said.
“Wicked” the musical is the fifth longest-running show in Broadway history and has won over 100 international awards including a Grammy Award and three Tony Awards.
The role is a dream come true for Kurtz, who debuted on Broadway as Anna in the Tony-nominated theater adaptation of the 2013 Disney film “Frozen” in February 2020.
Kurtz only had about a month of performances at the St. James Theatre before COVID-19 shut down Broadway. The theater star had to move home to Milton and reconnect with her roots. It was hard at first, but Kurtz carries the experience with her.
“Coming back to New York, I feel like that time that I spent in Georgia, especially with my family, was so valuable, and I’m carrying all of that love and support,” Kurtz said.
The actress spent her time at home doing theater in Atlanta, like the Alliance Theatre production of the musical adaptation of 1983 film “Trading Places.”
Kurtz said she’s lucky to have grown up in Georgia with strong support from her friends, family and the theater community.
“I got so many opportunities being in the theater program at Milton,” Kurtz said.
As a part of the Milton High School theater program, the actress racked up two Shuler awards, which honor Georgia-based high school theater. Kurtz was named Best Leading Actress for Milton’s 2015 production of “Mary Poppins” and Best Leading Actress for 2012 in the program’s “Spamalot” production. She was also nominated for Best Leading Actress in 2011 and 2014.
Kurtz also performed at the Jimmy Awards, a national competition known as
“the Tonys for teenagers.”
With several awards under her belt, Kurtz received a scholarship for Carnegie Mellon University’s pre-college program and later attended the University of Michigan to study musical theater.
“My time in Milton High School was absolutely instrumental in getting me to where I am today,” Kurtz said.
In her second Broadway role, Kurtz is focused on making the iconic role of Glinda her own. Kurtz said after she was cast, people asked if she had watched bootlegs of other performances to figure out her rendition of famous songs like “Popular.”
“I really tried not to, and just tried to come up with my own bits, my own feel,” Kurtz said.
The creative team at the show welcomed her approach, and Kurtz said she can now take “creative liberties and comedic liberties” to add something new to every show.
While the actress admits she wants to pull from previous performances of Glinda, she often instead pulls from her time as Anna in “Frozen” as a source of inspiration.
“Frozen” centers on two sisters Anna and Elsa, and the complicated dynamics in their relationship. “Wicked” focuses on a pair of unlikely best friends, Glinda and Elphaba — characters from the 1939 classic film “The Wizard of Oz.”
“They both focus on this relationship between two women and that relationship evolves,” Kurtz said. “I think I carried my experience from ‘Frozen’ into this role because it is almost like a sister relationship.”
The actress said she also pulls from her own relationship with her sister to perform the dynamic between Glinda and Elphaba.
Kurtz has already set her sights on her next dream: originating a role that goes to Broadway.
“There’s nothing like that process of helping create a role and create a show,” Kurtz said. “That would be something I would really love to do next.”
10 | March 23, 2023 | Johns Creek Herald | AppenMedia.com/Johns_Creek NEWS
MCKENZIE KURTZ / PROVIDED Milton High School graduate McKenzie Kurtz will play Glinda in the 20th year of “Wicked” the musical’s run.
KING’S
King’s Ridge boys basketball wins first state championship
ALPHARETTA, Ga. — The King’s Ridge Christian School made history March 11 in the Macon Centreplex when the boys basketball team defeated Mount Pisgah 68-58, earning the title of Georgia High School Association’s Class A Division 1 State Champions.
Led by head coach Bob Martin in his fifth year, the team returned to the championship game for the second consecutive year after finishing runner-up in 2022. The team finished the season 23-10 and faced tough competition weekly as a member of Region 6, which housed three of the final four teams in the tournament.
King’s Ridge hit the road as a No. 4 seed to face Social Circle in round one with a 69-60 final, Rabun County in round two with a 65-30 final, Woodville-Tompkins in the quarterfinals with a 62-54 final and Mount Vernon in the semifinals at 53-48 before returning to Macon.
Micah Hoover with 25 points and Zak Thomas with 24 points were the leading scorers March 11.
The Tigers were led all season by its four seniors Micah Hoover, Isaac Martin, Jack Thomas and Zak Thomas.
“We are grateful for the many blessings this great game has given us. We use basketball as a tool to help develop intangibles such as discipline, teamwork, friendships, commitment, attitude, and dealing with adversity,” Martin said. “While we may fail at times, the lessons learned along the way will make the biggest difference. The players bought into the team by being selfless and accomplishing a goal bigger than themselves. That is the biggest win of all. We were blessed with the opportunity to play in a state championship game and win. We thank God every day for His many blessings.”
AppenMedia.com/Johns_Creek | Johns Creek Herald | March 23, 2023 | 11 NEWS
RIDGE CHRISTIAN SCHOOL/PROVIDED King’s Ridge Christian School boys basketball team earn the title of Georgia High School Association’s Class A Division 1 State Champions March 11.
Partnering with a therapist to strengthen your child’s EQ
In the busyness of life, many of us grew up thinking we must keep going despite how we feel, and if symptoms of mental illness are not screaming at us, then we are “fine.” In other words, because our symptoms are not always visible, we often neglect considering therapy until things get extremely bad. In my experience, many adults who started therapy later in life had symptoms that began in childhood and would have benefitted from seeing a therapist in their youth. Statistics show that 50% of mental health problems are established by age 14 and 75% by age 24, with it taking an average of 11 years after symptoms first appear for an individual to seek treatment.
Due to many common barriers surrounding mental health, parents tend to seek therapy for their child as a last resort when they experience difficulties at home and school - often after exhausting all other options. While more attention-demanding symptoms like anger issues, wishing to harm themselves or others, or crippling depression are valid reasons to consider therapy for your child, therapy can still be beneficial for children with more subtle symptoms like social withdrawal, acting out, or experiencing the impact of recent life events.
Therapy is an individualized process where kids can acknowledge their own experiences and develop coping skills to work through their emotions, also known as strengthening their EQ, or emotional intelligence. In therapy, kids build confidence, social and
emotional awareness, conflict resolution, anger management, problem-solving tools, stress management skills, selfawareness, and self-discovery (Many of us could use these skills even though our lives appear normal and healthy).
Although these skills can be taught at home, parents may run into roadblocks when they try to fix a child’s symptoms rather than address the root of their behavior - often unknowingly bringing in their own predispositions and biases. Alternatively, therapists are trained to put aside their beliefs and biases to hear their client’s voice and help them build healthier living habits. Throughout this process, parents can partner with their child’s therapist, ask questions, and receive advice as they support their child’s mental well-being. While therapy is a safe place for children to share their experience and find support, it is also important for parents to create this space at home. Teaching a child healthy way to identify and manage their emotions at a young age will encourage them to avoid hiding their problems and know that they never have to face them alone. Each child not only has different experiences, but they also react to those experiences in different ways - even within the same family. Validate these experiences and normalize conversations around mental health, allowing kids to feel seen, heard, and acknowledged – knowing that no problem or feeling is too small to receive support or too large to overcome.
Summit Counseling Center is offering therapy groups for students throughout the summer, teaching skills to overcome anxiety, develop social skills, prepare for college, and more. Learn more about our groups and register your child at tinyurl. com/sccsummer23.
Sponsored Section March 23, 2023 | Johns Creek Herald | 12
Brought to you by – Shaquanta “Shelley” Shelley, LAPC, Staff Associate Therapist at Summit Counseling Center
ISTOCK
Medical ethics and dermatology
Ethical questions arise in all fields of medicine, and dermatology is no different. One of the more remarkable cases that I encountered during training was that of a woman who became pregnant while taking a medication known to cause birth defects. Despite explicit and severe warnings, she insisted that she be allowed to keep taking the medicine throughout her pregnancy. When her dermatologist refused to prescribe the medicine, the patient convinced the hospital’s ethics board to recommend that her obstetrician continue prescribing the medication during pregnancy. The woman received her prescriptions at the board’s recommendation, and the baby was tragically but not unpredictably born with birth defects.
Although I wholeheartedly disagree with the ethics board’s recommendation, I can see how ethical principles are sometimes difficult to apply in practice. The four guiding principles of medical ethics are often taught to be “autonomy, beneficence, non-maleficence, and justice.” Loosely translated, these principles mean: respect someone’s right to choose; do good; do no harm, and act in a fair or equitable way.
The above example is extreme. The ethics board made a mistake and prioritized “autonomy” above all other considerations (including “do no harm”). But many less dramatic ethical considerations occur almost every day in practice. When treating patients, I find that the common sense strategies of putting the patient first and asking what I would want for a family member go a long way towards making sound ethical decisions.
In Mohs surgery, a tissue removal technique for curing skin cancers, shades of grey are often encountered. Cancer is not always black and white. Sometimes, invasive cancer has been eliminated, but the edges have “in situ” cancer – cancer
confined to the top layers of the skin, or the edges exhibit “actinic keratoses,” best understood as “pre-cancers.” Severely sun-damaged individuals sometimes have cheeks or scalps that are covered with precancers and “in situ” cancers. Continuing to cut in such cases is sometimes not in the patient’s best interest. Instead, once the invasive cancer is removed, I frequently discuss switching strategies with my patients. We often treat the area around an invasive cancer with an anti-cancer cream post-operatively instead of dogmatically continuing to cut and missing the forest for the trees.
Personalized medicine is often medicine at its best. One recent patient presented to me for a second opinion regarding a melanoma on his eyelid. The first surgeon the patient saw recommended complete removal of the lower eyelid and a 3 month reconstruction process during which the patient would not be able to see from that eye. The patient and I discussed that the large margin the first surgeon recommended is the standard of care. However, the patient stated that at his age he did not want to undergo an extensive surgery. He understood the risks and chose a smaller margin. He understands that the “middle ground” option that he wanted is not in line with the official guidelines for treating cancers like his, but the smaller surgery that he chose is the option that is right for him. The standard of care is a guideline. The patient comes first.
As interesting as philosophical principles like autonomy and nonmaleficence are, I have found that the most useful principles are variations of the Golden Rule. Treat patients like you would want your family or loved ones treated. And put the patient first.
If you or a loved one has a skin cancer or other skin care needs, please consider Premier Dermatology and Mohs Surgery of Atlanta. It is our privilege to take care of you.
EMPTY NEST • Sponsored Section AppenMedia.com/Johns_Creek | Johns Creek Herald | March 23, 2023 | 13
Brought to You by - Brent Taylor, MD, Premiere Dermatology and Mohs Surgery of Atlanta
PEXELS
Misconceptions about active Adult 55+ living
Assumption: Active Adult and Independent Living are the same thing
Reality: FALSE! Active adult communities serve as choice-based option for individuals 55 and better who may not be ready for the needsbased services and amenities of a traditional senior living community.
Assumption: Active Adult site staff are medically certified
Reality: FALSE! Our staff does not provide any medical care or interventions. This allows our residents to maintain their long-time health care providers and medical independence.
Assumption: I have to be retired in order to move into an Active Adult community
Reality: FALSE! Just like living in a multi-family community, we encourage our residents to continue to engage in their career and social interests as they did prior to moving in!
The Active Adult environment caters to older adults who typically have lower health needs and prefer an active,
community-based lifestyle where they can engage with their neighbors of similar age. This may allow for a stronger sense of community and an easier adjustment to apartment living. Here at Outlook Gwinnett, we seek to provide luxurious, worry-free living long before you are ready to relinquish your independence. Look forward to spending hot summer days lounging by our meticulously cared for outdoor pool! Or connect with your neighbors and plan your evening get-togethers around our stocked wine nook and sports lounge. Add in our community calendar, packed with a never-ending variety of SUN program activities, the possibilities are limitless here at Outlook Gwinnett!
Stop by our leasing office today to find out how to reserve a spot in this unique community today.
1500 Laurel Crossing Parkway Buford, GA 30519 (678) 890-5371
outlookgwinnett.com
14 | March 23, 2023 | Johns Creek Herald | AppenMedia.com/Johns_Creek EMPTY NEST • Sponsored Section
Brought to you by - Outlook Gwinnett
EMPTY NEST • Sponsored Section AppenMedia.com/Johns_Creek | Johns Creek Herald | March 23, 2023 | 15
Your will needs a healthcare checkup
Brought to You by -- Geerdes & Associates
Some people may think an estate plan only includes a will or trust, but a complete estate plan should also contain supplementary documents such as a Healthcare Directive. In Georgia, a Healthcare Directive is essentially what is called a Living Will or Medical Power of Attorney in other states. It is also called a medical proxy. A Healthcare Directive is important to your estate plan because it determines who gets to be your guardian if you are ever declared mentally
GEERDES
incompetent and also determines whether you want life support in an emergency situation.
Advanced Healthcare Directives ensure that your choices for life and death aren’t determined by an arbitrary third party who doesn’t have your best interests at heart, and it also prevents family members from fighting each other on whether to give you life support. By making the hard decisions yourself and letting those who care about you know what your choices are beforehand, you can have peace of mind that no one will be forced to make a difficult choice for you.
16 | March 23, 2023 | Johns Creek Herald | AppenMedia.com/Johns_Creek EMPTY NEST • Sponsored Section
Organizations host workshop concentrating on teen safety
By DELANEY TARR delaney@appenmedia.com
ROSWELL, Ga. — Metro Atlanta nonprofit Revved Up Kids partnered with the Roswell Police Department to host a day of personal safety and self-defense workshops for children and teenage girls on March 11 at Roswell Area Park.
The two-hour sessions were split by age, with the first for children 6 to 11 years old and the second sessions for teenage girls ages 11-18. About 15 teenage girls and their parents gathered in the auditorium for a conversation on personal safety and a lesson on basic selfdefense moves.
The seminars were hosted by Alli Neal, founder of Revved Up Kids. She began the organization in 2009 to protect children from sexual abuse exploitation.
“We want to proactively equip them, but also want to prepare them if things go wrong,” Neal said.
The workshop is split into a few main sections. First, Neal presents various scenarios and asks the girls what they would do. She provides tips on how to safely navigate dark parking lots, parties and various social situations while pointing out common red flags for exploitation.
Then the girls practice self-defense moves on prop figures. After the activity, they reaffirm the lessons from the day. Parents can participate at certain points, but Neal said its important that the information comes from her.
“Even though a lot of the stuff we say may be similar to what their parents say to them, they hear it differently from us,” Neal said.
The workshop pushes parents to have “family conversations” about difficult topics. Neal said she sees that parents don’t know how to have conversations with their kids about sexual predators.
Paige Laine brought her daughter Shelby to the seminar after the teenager was pulled over by police on a quiet road at night. Laine said she’s glad it was a real police officer that pulled her over, but it helped her realize all she had not told her daughter about personal safety.
The founder said the solution to sexual predators is not to bar children and teens from common activities, like using Snapchat and TikTok.
“You can’t just do that if you want to keep your child safe,” Neal said. “If you forbid it, they’re going to sneak behind your back, and if they get in trouble they won’t come to you.”
Instead, Neal tries to meet parents and children where they are. She knows social
media is how children interact with each other, so she runs multiple workshops devoted to navigating the internet, both for parents and children.
“Most of the time it’s the adults fear that gets in the way of children’s knowledge and safety,” Neal said.
Neal said parents are grateful to be taught the “dialogue” they can have with their children on safety and exploitation.
She listed several key tips she wants parents to teach their children.
The first, bodily autonomy, emphasizes that children get to decide who touches them. She also said parents should teach their kids to trust their instincts and understand that respect is a two-way street.
Roswell Police Department hosted the sessions as part of an ongoing partnership that Neal said started before the onset of COVID-19. The organization has hosted a few self-defense sessions each year with the police department.
“It’s a priority for the Roswell Police Department to equip our young people with the knowledge, skills, and abilities to keep themselves safe,” Roswell Public Information Officer Tim Lupo said. “Our partnership with Revved-Up Kids who provide an excellent, well-received curriculum, is one of the ways we accomplish that goal for our community.”
Neal hopes to eventually replicate those police partnerships in nearby communities like Johns Creek, Milton and Alpharetta. She also is seeking enough funds to make the program free for all.
For every group that pays tuition, the nonprofit trains another group free of charge. The Roswell workshop offered scholarships for teenagers in need after some attendees paid the “tuition.” She also runs seminars in disadvantaged parts of the community at no cost.
The nonprofit plans to hold another self-defense and personal safety training with Roswell Police Department sometime in summer 2023.
AppenMedia.com/Johns_Creek | Johns Creek Herald | March 23, 2023 | 17 NEWS
DELANEY TARR / APPEN MEDIA Shelby Laine practices a self-defense move on a set of prop legs at the March 11 personal safety and self-defense workshop run by nonprofit Revved Up Kids at Roswell Area Park.
Elections:
Continued from Page 1
either self-administration or entering into an agreement with Milton, Roswell, Alpharetta, Johns Creek and Mountain Park. The multi-city contract would have enabled one elections superintendent to oversee all the member cities’ municipal elections.
City staff in Johns Creek estimated that entering into the agreement would have cost the city more than $1 million, and operating its own election independently would have cost only slightly less.
In a spreadsheet, the city nailed down $721,884 of the $1 million for the first year of self-operated municipal elections and left some items unbudgeted. In its estimate, Johns Creek has accounted for 18 polling locations, the same number used by Fulton County in December 2022.
Fulton County set a deadline of March 31 for cities to decide whether they will go it alone.
Milton had a head start, spending more than a year to study the process through a six-member Municipal Election Feasibility Committee. The panel drew fire from some residents. One of its members, Mark Amick, was subpoenaed last June as part of a Fulton County investigation into Republican attempts to overturn the 2020 election.
Cities rethink strategy
Municipal officials were also informed recently that the county had lowered cost estimates it will charge cities to operate their municipal elections.
Milton launched its effort last spring under the presumption that Fulton County would charge more than $6 per registered voter to run polling for their
Estimated election costs for cities
realistic to really explore this in 2025.”
Johns Creek City Councilman Chris Coughlin illustrates the process for instant runoff voting to councilmembers at a March 14 work session. The process is not yet allowed in the state, but Coughlin said it’s a possible avenue to cut election costs if the measure were to clear the Legislature.
municipal election. That figure jumped to $11.48 in December, then fell to $9 and some change.
On Feb. 1, county officials adopted a percentage-based cost formula setting the charge to cities at $7 per registered voter – lower than originally estimated, but still more than twice the $2.96 it charged cities in 2021 when municipal elections were last held.
Even so, the county’s cost reduction spurred some cities to rethink their efforts to go it alone with their own election apparatus.
At its Feb. 28 meeting, the Johns Creek City Council agreed to sign with Fulton County and abandon further efforts to operate its own elections for 2023.
The formal agreement was approved on the City Council’s consent agenda March 14.
That same night, at their work session, councilmembers explored opportunities in the future for city-run elections.
In an effort to save on costs they pay Fulton County to run their municipal elections, North Fulton cities have compiled estimates for what it would cost to run their own polling. Right now, there is no final figure from the county, but latest estimates indicate the cities will pay twice the amount they paid the county to run the 2021 municipal elections.
Here is a rundown of the latest figures from cities.
City Cost Polling sites
Milton $72,254 2 Johns Creek $991,857 18 Alpharetta $298,532 3 Roswell* $362,822 21
*Roswell also had another proposal that estimated $320,648 for 12 polling locations
Note: Sandy Springs does not have municipal elections this year
Also on March 14, Roswell announced in a committee meeting it would also sign with Fulton County to conduct its 2023 municipal elections. Councilmembers had been split over the idea days earlier at a workshop.
Alpharetta was scheduled to hold a March 20 City Council workshop to discuss cost estimates for running its own polling this November. Cost estimates for an Alpharetta municipal election this year have been drafted, and it is based on a varying number of polling locations. At most, the city is looking to spend around $300,000 for three locations.
Roswell backs out
During a March 14 Administration and Finance and Recreation and Parks Committee meeting, Roswell City Councilman Mike Palermo said the city does not have enough time to weigh all the cost variables to reach an informed decision by the county’s March 31 deadline.
Roswell requires two readings for the agreement with Fulton County, so the city plans to have a special-called meeting for the measure sometime in late March.
“The fact that we’re in mid-March and there is so much work that needs to be done — there’s so many unknowns,” Palermo said. “I just feel that it’s more
Roswell Mayor Kurt Wilson added another motion for the council to “formally commit” to run municipal elections in 2025. The council forwarded the measure to the next scheduled City Council meeting.
Wilson attempted to add a third motion, which would have committed the City Council to appoint an election committee by September, but it drew little support from the council.
Councilwoman Lee Hills, who has been a strong advocate for local control, said she was disappointed to see the city abandon its efforts this year.
“It’s unfortunate that this conversation is going in a direction that is not doing this in 2023, but I could not be more elated that it sounds like we’ve got great support for running our own municipal elections,” she said.
Earlier estimates show that Roswell planned to spend $362,822 for 21 polling locations. There was also a proposal based on 12 locations estimated for $320,648.
Johns Creek takes a lesson
While Johns Creek is out of the self-run election drive this year, City Councilman Chris Coughlin is ready for 2025.
Coughlin presented a five-page memo at the Johns Creek City Council March 14 work session detailing variables a city elections task force should consider upon its formation. The idea of a task force was introduced Feb. 28 by Mayor John Bradberry at a City Council meeting in which a few residents voiced a desire to take on the project.
Coughlin outlined three variables, including runoff voting, timing of elections and number of precincts.
For example, Coughlin mentioned the prospect of instant runoff voting, which remains stalled in the Legislature.
Instant runoff voting provides for ballots to include “top choices” for voters, eliminating the need for a runoff election in cases where one candidate fails to garner more than 50 percent of the tally. Johns Creek has already passed a measure to allow the practice if and when it clears the Legislature.
Instant runoff voting, Coughlin said, could save the city from 25 to 40 percent in election costs, and it would encourage more turnout and statistical power for voters.
Not everyone on the council was on board with the instant runoff proposal, however, but they agreed it warranted further study.
“I’m not necessarily sold on any of it,” Mayor Bradberry said. “I do think that there is optimism to think that maybe we could save money … but again, the devil’s in the details.”
— Staff reporter Delaney Tarr contributed to this story.
18 | March 23, 2023 | Johns Creek Herald | AppenMedia.com/Johns_Creek NEWS
AMBER PERRY/APPEN MEDIA
Branding:
Continued from Page 1
Councilman Chris Coughlin offered a potential avenue, once mentioned at the retreat, like working with Olivia Ammons, assistant to the city manager. Ammons leads Green Communities initiatives.
Councilwoman Erin Elwood proposed the City Council charge the Vitality Committee with a specific research project, like Town Center.
“What does a healthy Town Center look like? And what have other cities done when they leaned into creating … a culture of wellness in their city?” Elwood asked. “Why are they known for that? Maybe it’s the infrastructure, maybe it’s the policies or programs …”
Elwood said the Vitality Committee is perceived as a “branding committee,” but it doesn’t make the brand. Branding falls under the scope of the city’s Communications Department, she said.
Some councilmembers wanted to cancel the committee’s April meeting to regroup but ultimately decided to move forward as scheduled.
“Obviously, we’ve got work to do,” Bradberry said.
Mayor opines on media
At the following City Council meeting, former Johns Creek City Councilman Brian Weaver shared concerns with the council about the city’s role in the Juneteenth celebration, which was approved last month. Weaver was asked to join the Juneteenth Planning Committee.
Weaver said he was informed that all decisions would have to go through city staff first. Concerned that the city might become a “dictator” in Juneteenth planning, Weaver reminded councilmembers that the Arts, Entertainment and Culture (ACE) Committee recommended a partnership with Impact Johns Creek.
He questioned the city’s process and noted that the event was once headed in a different direction.
“It was, I guess, the combination of the Fourth of July and Juneteenth,” he said.
While public comment does not typically entail back-and-forth, Mayor Bradberry interjected and said, “Yeah, that’s a … that’s a misnomer that’s been put out there. And I was disappointed that the media was led to believe that because there was no basis in fact.”
In early February, Appen Media reported that the idea of a freedom festival, which would wrap Fourth
of July and Juneteenth together in a weeks-long celebration, had been floated at a previous ACE Committee meeting.
The comments can be found around the 47-minute mark in the Dec. 8 ACE Committee meeting video recording, available on the city’s website.
The committee’s idea of a freedom fest was also mentioned by Bradberry, himself, at the strategic planning retreat Jan. 29 in Greenville, South Carolina.
While no city video of the retreat is available, Appen Media was in attendance, and its reporter audio taped workshop discussions.
Speaking at the Jan. 29 retreat, the mayor commented on the concept.
“One thing that the [ACE] Committee is talking about is — just like we have July 4, Juneteenth is very significant to, you know, our Black residents,” Bradberry said Jan. 29. “And the possibility of maybe combining those in some way as like a … almost like a two-week freedom festival, when they celebrate freedom for everyone in our country …”
To Bradberry’s comment, Councilman Erramilli asked for clarification.
“Juneteenth to July 4?” Erramilli asked.
Bradberry said, “Yeah.”
AppenMedia.com/Johns_Creek | Johns Creek Herald | March 23, 2023 | 19 NEWS
Local Read at appenmedia.com/business
Read Local, Shop
Newspaper Delivery Route Openings with Appen Media Group
We are looking for one person or couple interested in delivering weekly newspapers in South Forsyth, Alpharetta and the Johns Creek areas.
Requirements: Must have a perfect driving record and background check, reliable transportation, honest, hard-working and positive attitude.
For more information or to apply, email heidi@appenmedia.com and include a paragraph or two about who you are and any relevant background/experience. In the subject line of the email please put “Delivery Route Application.”
Visit Roswell director to head state group
AUGUSTA, Ga. — The Georgia Association of Convention and Visitors Bureaus, a resource for Georgia’s destination organizations named Visit Roswell Executive Director Andy Williams president of the trade association for 2023 at a February conference.
Williams has worked in sales, project coordinator and director positions in visitors bureaus in Dunwoody, Madison, Atlanta and Roswell. He joined the board of the association in 2019 and served as the group’s vice president in 2022.
The Visit Roswell Executive director assumed the role at the association’s annual conference
on Feb. 12-15. At the Georgia Association of Convention and Visitors Bureaus, Williams will head up a 12-member board of regional destination organization leaders and tourism professionals.
“Andy is a proven leader with a diverse background in understanding and strategically capitalizing on the many segments of the travel and convention business markets,” Georgia Association of Convention and Visitors Bureaus Executive Director Jay Markwalter said.
The association aims to “maximize the impact” of visitor economy with tourism education, leadership development and legislative work.
Roswell financial adviser earns Award of Excellence
ROSWELL, Ga.
— David Wash, CPA, was recently recognized with the 2022 Award of Excellence by Strategic Planning Group. This award signifies a consistently high
level of production in the financial services industry.
"David has been a consistent contributor to our organization for many years,” Strategic Planning Group's Tomas Parks said. “I am also proud of the significant impact David has had advising his clients about their financial future.”
20 | March 23, 2023 | Johns Creek Herald | AppenMedia.com/Johns_Creek NEWS
GEORGIA ASSOCIATION OF CONVENTION AND VISITORS BUREAUS / PROVIDED Visit Roswell Executive Director Andy Williams will lead the Georgia Association of Convention and Visitors Bureaus at a February conference.
WASH
See solution Page 31
AppenMedia.com/Johns_Creek | Johns Creek Herald | March 23, 2023 | 21 North Fulton’s Only On-Site Crematory 770-645-1414 info@northsidechapel.com www.northsidechapel.com Locally Owned and Operated • Pre-planning • Funeral Services • Grief Support • Veteran Services 12050 Crabapple Road • Roswell, GA 30075 • Cremation Services Copyright ©2023 PuzzleJunction.com Dunwoody Crier 3/23/23 Crossword PuzzleJunction.com Solution on next page 34 Golden rule word 38 Saunters 39 Editor’s mark 41 Peddle 42 Alternative word 44 Order taker 45 Old-hat 48 Pester 49 Kind of ray 50 Following 51 Old World duck 52 Water carrier 53 Hindu princess 54 Wedding wear 55 Contributes 59 Chemical suffix 60 Farm call 1234 567 891011 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 31 32 33 34 35 36 37 38 39 40 41 42 43 44 45 46 47 48 49 50 51 52 53 54 55 56 57 58 59 60 61 62 63 64 65 66 Across 1 China problem 5 Slot machine symbol 8 Appraise 12 Thun’s river 13 Understood 15 Base 16 Swedish shag rugs 17 First Hebrew letter 18 Salad cheese 19 Gymnast’s goal 20 Suffers 21 The Wizard of Menlo Park 23 Vail trail 25 Artist Cézanne 26 Between or among stars 32 Hog noise 35 Sleep on it 36 Ransom ___ Olds 37 Telephoned 38 Search 39 Hacienda room 40 River islet 41 Grove of trees 42 Kind of alcohol 43 Subculture of the 60s 46 Lily family member 47 Respiratory disorder 51 High-pitched 54 Bud holder 56 Bonehead 57 Castle defense 58 Yorkshire city 60 Sacrifice, at times 61 Feudal worker 62 Sarcastic 63 ___ meridiem 64 Milldam 65 Overhead trains 66 Purim’s month Down 1 Wheelbarrows 2 Salma of Frida 3 Shiraz native 4 Zoologist’s foot 5 Formal dance 6 One-spots 7 Tear 8 Bar request 9 Ancient greetings 10 Mambo king Puente 11 Panache 13 Tarnish 14 Cinema 20 Polly, to Tom 22 The Everly Brothers, e.g. 24 Jewelry item 25 False start? 27 Slip away 28 Geneva’s river 29 Wife of Jacob 30 Confederate 31 Omani money 32 Tennis’s Steffi 33 Track
PRESERVING THE PAST
Sun Valley Beach Park is an oasis between two cities
When teenagers in Roswell and Alpharetta needed a place to hang out in the 1950s and 1960s, they would often congregate at the Sun Valley Beach Park on Highway 9 halfway between Roswell and Alpharetta. Today the remaining land is overgrown with weeds and beaver dams where traces of its existence are barely visible on Sun Valley Road, but in its day, it was an amazing family recreational and entertainment park popular throughout north Fulton County. Here is the story.
MEYERS
The park was founded in 1950 by Joe C. Mansell (1906-1997) as a fishing lake only. Joe was the principal investor and manager of the operation. The park grew and a Board of Directors was established consisting of friends and relatives of Joe including architect Jim Barker who designed the park’s bathhouse; his brother-in-law Chuck Cunningham, also an architect; Jasper Dolvin, Principal of the Roswell Elementary School; Joe’s cousin, Clarence Westbrook; Bob Patten, a builder and Terry Martin among others.
Sun Valley Park offered a wide assortment of attractions including a 14-acre swimming lake with an imported white sand beach, two boating and fishing lakes one of which had a skating rink around it. The park had a stable operated by Joe’s cousin, Harry Kaye Mansell and cousin Howard Rucker. The stable offered horseback riding and pony rides for children. Nephew Willie Mansell ran the bait shop. There were row boats for rent, train rides around the property, a pony-pulled covered wagon, picnic grounds with tables, area for Boy Scout overnighters and a snack bar. A bowling alley was added in the early 1960s. Admission for adults was 50 cents and 25 cents for children when it first opened.
Joe’s daughter, Linda Mansell Martin, has many memories of the park. She worked every summer as a teenager “behind the basket counter (for holding swimmers’ clothes) or flipping burgers at the snack bar or eventually becoming a lifeguard at the swim lake when I was a little older.” She recalls “sock hops, picnics, swimming, diving and sunning, train rides, fishing and horseback riding through the woods, egg hunts, and even a few folks who were caught
‘skinny dipping’ when they broke in at night.”
In the 1950s the rivalry between Roswell and Alpharetta teenagers was strong. The park was neutral ground where teens from all over the area would gather to enjoy the fun and sun. “I don’t know what teenagers in Alpharetta and Roswell would have done without the park. It healed some of the rivalry between the two cities,” says Linda. Up to 500 to a 1,000 people would visit the park on weekends.
Linda says her father” along with his 4 siblings, inherited land along Highway 9 from their father, Robert Henry Mansell II, a farmer, who provided his children with a house and 60 acres of land each.” Joe, Robert’s oldest son, started his career as a farmer also, but found that he preferred other ways of making a living. In 1930 he opened a filling station in Roswell, and then an ice and coal business. Subsequently he was an investigator in the Fulton County Solicitor General’s office in Atlanta where he worked for 20 years.
Joe served as Mayor of Roswell in 1941 and 1942.
He sold part of his 60 acres to Carroll Beyers for Beyers Furniture Store and land for Greenlawn Cemetery in 1961. The rest was Sun Valley Property, all along Hwy 9. When his wife, Lessie Coleman Mansell (1908-1959) became ill with cancer in 1950, he quit his Atlanta job to be home with his wife and two daughters. It was then that Joe decided to convert the property into the recreation park. After his wife died, the family moved to Florida for 8 months where Joe managed the Sharlo Manor Motel on Clearwater Beach. In October 1965 Joe sold the park to John Talbott, Jr, an Atlanta physician, who operated the park for three years before closing it.
Today there are businesses and apartments along Sun Valley Drive, and the City of Roswell owns 11 acres of the original property. A few remnants of the park’s glory days can be detected by discerning eyes, but most of the remaining park land is overgrown with vegetation.
22 | March 23, 2023 | Johns Creek Herald | AppenMedia.com/Johns_Creek OPINION
FAMILY/PROVIDED
A postcard of Sun Valley Park shows some of its features: lake, beach, walking trails and miniature pumpkin church. CIRCA MID -1950s
BOB
SEPTEMBER 28 1959 FEATURE ARTICLE ATLANTA CONSTITUTION
Columnist
Joe Mansell, searching for Civil War relics with a mine detector at the site of the New Hope Church battle during the Atlanta campaign. He collected a bucket full of minie balls, a Civil War bullet.
AppenMedia.com/Johns_Creek | Johns Creek Herald | March 23, 2023 | 23
Weekend trips to Flowerland and Fischer Mansion
“Dr. L. C. Fischer, according to his annual custom, invites the public to visit his country home, Flowerland, near Chamblee, to see his rose gardens which are among the most beautiful in the state and are now nearing full bloom. Dr. Fischer announces that the rhododendron and climbing roses are in full bloom, and that the bush roses, which are rapidly opening, will reach full bloom within the next ten or fifteen days.”
This invitation appeared in the May 14, 1939, Atlanta Constitution.
Dr. L. C. (Luther) Fischer and Dr. Edward Campbell Davis started the Davis-Fischer Sanitorium on Crew Street in 1908. Then they built Crawford Long Hospital on Linden Avenue in 1911, which is now Emory University Hospital Midtown. (“Caring for Atlanta, A History of Emory Crawford Long Hospital,” by Ren Davis)
Prior to Dr. Davis death in 1931, the two doctors changed the hospital from privately owned to a nonprofit operation to provide healthcare to all Atlantans. In 1940, Dr. Fischer gave the hospital to the Emory University School of Medicine, “to serve as an arm
of its teaching and healing mission.”
Dr. Fischer bought 60 acres in Sandy Springs in the 1920s and started a dairy called Oak Terrace. In 1932, he sold the dairy farm and bought 138 acres in Chamblee. He and wife Lucy Hurt Fischer built a home with elaborate gardens, calling it Flowerland. The home was designed by Phillip Trammel Shutze.
The gardens included rock walls and ponds to make the best use of the terrain and Nancy Creek. People from all around Atlanta and farther away would drive to Flowerland, especially in the spring. Visitors often caused traffic to back up for more than a mile on Chamblee-Dunwoody Road.
Flowers from Flowerland were sold in a retail shop by the same name on Peachtree Road. They were also cut and placed around the hospital.
When Lucy Fischer became ill, Dr. Fischer continued having the gardens maintained for her to enjoy. After she died in 1937, Fischer sold the property to the John William Lee family, and Mrs. Lee later sold 48 acres to the Atlanta Diocese of the Catholic Church. The home became D’Youville Academy, a convent and school for girls. The name D’Youville came from the founder of the Sisters of Charity or Gray Nuns of Montreal, Marie Marguerite d’Youville.
In the 1970s, the school closed, and Fischer Mansion was sold to Atlanta Unity Church. The church used the mansion for church services, Sunday School, offices and a bookstore.
Fischer Mansion was in danger of being demolished in 2005, but it still stands as part of The Preserve
at Fischer Mansion neighborhood on Chamblee Dunwoody Road. The home was placed on the National Register of Historic Places in 2011. Next door is D’Youville Condominiums, developed in the 1970s by Cousins Properties, built on land which was part of the gardens of Flowerland.
Of course, the history of the land does not begin with Dr. Fischer. This was land of the Creek Nation before the 1820s land lotteries. John Barrette of Hall County was granted the property after the land lottery but sold it soon after. William Wallace owned the land beginning in the 1880s, where he operated a sawmill and furniture shop.
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.
24 | March 23, 2023 | Johns Creek Herald | AppenMedia.com/Johns_Creek OPINION
PAST TENSE
VALERIE BIGGERSTAFF Columnist
PHOTOS BY PAT SABIN/PROVIDED
Fischer Mansion in 1999, during ownership of Atlanta Unity Church.
AAPPEN PRESSCLU B appenmedia.com/join
Fischer Mansion, as seen from the back in 1999.
Hostas are the solution to shade
Quandary! What if you love trees but you also love flowers and gardening? Trees provide relief from the unrelenting heat of Georgia summers and create an atmosphere of tranquility, but they also block out the sun, a requirement for most annuals and perennials. When my family decided to move from the city to a rural suburban home, we fell in love with a home I described to friends and relatives as a home that looked like it was helicoptered into a hardwood forest. Within days of moving into our new home, I soon asked myself, how can I love a house in the woods and also have a flower garden? The solution was hostas!
No shade garden should be without a hosta. I now have more than 75 varieties of hostas in my garden. Hostas have been the mainstay of shade gardens for at least one hundred years. Even though their flowers are insignificant, the appeal is the diversity of their leaves. The leaves of hostas, thanks to hybridizers, come in a variety of sizes, colors, and textures.
Hosta is a diverse genus of plants native to Japan and brought to the United States in the mid-1800s. Interestingly, Dr. Philip von Siebold, the first European that wished to share hostas with the world beyond the borders of Japan, smuggled them out of Japan by boat. Unfortunately, the ship wrecked, and a forbidden map of Japanese coastline was discovered along with Siebold’s collection of hostas, resulting in his arrest and the loss of most of his precious cargo of botanical specimens. Some hostas survived and were successfully introduced beyond the borders of Japan in the 1830s.
For over 100 years, hostas have been extensively hybridized by both amateurs and professionals to produce hundreds of shade garden possibilities. For drama, try big and bold hostas with large dinner platesized leaves such as Elegans, Big Daddy or Sum and Substance or small and demure varieties such as Little Blue Mouse Ears. Color options are also available from true green to blue green to chartreuse green to yellow green. Other hosta hybrids provide more possibilities, including those with white, cream or blue borders,
About the Author
hostas with white, lavender, and purple flowers, as well as flowers with fragrance and without fragrance. Thanks to hybridizing techniques, the hosta varieties seem endless, and there are always new introductions to add to your woodland garden.
Another benefit of adding hostas to your garden: they are easy to grow! All they need is soil amended with compost, water/rain once a week, and dose of fertilizer or manure in the spring. If deer inhabit your woodland garden, you will need to purchase a deer repellent. My favorite is Liquid Fence® which I apply with a sprayer once a month.
To begin your love affair with hostas, go online, search ‘hosta’ and click on images to look at the dazzling varieties of hostas to add appeal to your woodland garden.
PROVIDED
To learn more about how to plant, care for, fertilize, and prevent eradication from deer, hostas’ enemy number one, visit the NFMG YouTube channel and check out my Spring 2021 Gardening Lecture, “Hosta – A Perfect Addition to Your Shade Garden” at https://youtu.be/ N5vUNT1aYjw.
Happy gardening!
North Fulton Master Gardeners, Inc. is a Georgia nonprofit 501(c) (3) organization whose purpose is to educate its members and the public in the areas of horticulture and ecology in order to promote and foster community enrichment. Master Gardener Volunteers are trained and certified by The University of Georgia Cooperative Extension. Learn more at nfmg.net.
This week’s “Garden Buzz” guest columnist is Carole MacMullan, a master gardener since 2012. Carole describes herself as a born biologist. Since childhood, she loved to explore the out-of-doors and garden with her mother. When she entered college, she selected biology as her major and made teaching high school biology her career for 35 years. After retirement in 2008, she had three goals: to move from Pittsburgh to Atlanta to be near her daughter and granddaughter, to volunteer, and to become a Master Gardener. Shortly after moving, she became involved with the philanthropic mission of the Assistance League of Atlanta (ALA) and in 2012, completed the Master Gardener program and joined the North Fulton Master Gardeners (NFMG) and the Milton Garden Club. Carole uses her teaching skills to create a variety of presentations on gardening topics for the NFMG Lecture Series and Speakers Bureau. She also volunteers weekly at the ALA thrift store and acts as chair of their Links to Education scholarship program. Her favorite hobbies are gardening, hiking, biking, and reading.
For more information
• Growing Hostas - https://extension.uga.edu/publications/detail. html?number=C955
• Rosemary
• North Fulton Master Gardenershttps://www.nfmg.net/
AppenMedia.com/Johns_Creek | Johns Creek Herald | March 23, 2023 | 25 OPINION
GARDEN BUZZ
CAROLE MACMULLAN
Guest Columnist
Barrett, Hosta (Firefly Book, New Zealand, 2004)
Top left- Guacamola hosta - Hosta of the Year 2002, The American Hosta Growers Association
Top right - Striptease Hosta - Hosta of the Year 2005, The American Hosta Growers Association
Middle - Blue Angel Hosta, 6 Varieties of Hosta in containers
Bottom right - June Hosta - Hosta of the Year 2012, The American Hosta Growers Association
My lack of electrical knowledge is shocking
MIKE TASOS
When youngest son Greg reported that one of his friends was going to work for Pike, my puzzled reaction was: “I didn’t know he was fond of wheelbarrows, sod, and all things greenery.”
“No Dad, not that Pike. He’s going to work for the electrical people,” Greg corrected me.
So, no dealing with Mulch and chinch bugs. Instead, the friend will be playing with enough electricity to fry him like he’s strapped into Ol’ Sparky, or whatever the electric chair was named at many prisons. He’ll be in one of those buckets attached to trucks and then hope his training taught him good from bad in terms of wires that is.
I have no idea why there are times of year when static electricity is on us like some type of plague. Touch something randomly and sparks fly from your fingertips like you’re immersed in a remake of “The Wizard of Oz” or fiddle-deep in a Charlie
Daniels Band song.
With a little “pop” like that being so unnerving, a heaping helping from Zeus is unimaginable.
Skip Caray, the late Braves announcer who was so crochety he never failed to amuse, was synonymous with Georgia Power as he shilled: “Don’t step on downed power lines.” Skip found the tagline hilarious, doubtless even more mirthful after he had imbibed a few. Sure do miss Skip.
I’m pretty much all thumbs when it comes to all things electricity. I’m usually pretty good with changing a lightbulb, providing I don’t outrun my coverage and “square peg-round hole” things by doing the uber-manly gesture of using too much wattage.
Bottom line is that electricity scares the bejezus out of me. The fear is justified and stems from a past incident that culminated with me prone on the floor, foggily looking up at the ladder I’d fell (more like flown) from and, for some reason that could be written up in a medical journal, I smelled lemons.
All I had wanted to do was change a ceiling light fixture. Zeus had other ideas and even though it wasn’t a downed power line, I got zonked when I grabbed the wrong wire and as citrus smells invaded my olfactory, knew I had made a rotten choice.
Whenever there are electrical problems in the house, I take no chances after my brush with getting thunderstruck. I call an electrician and take no chances. Not only do I leave the room to let him work, I leave the house or, better yet, leave the county and hope I am rewarded with light when I return and flip the switch.
I marvel at guys who can come into a house and work some sort of magic by getting the lights back on.
Me? I’m an easy mark and unscrupulous handyman’s eyes light
up like a slot machine when I say: “It’s broken. Can you fix it?”
As inept as I am with repairs, it’s no wonder going to Home Depot is in no way comfortable or therapeutic. No sir, it can be as traumatizing and nauseating as flashing lights in the rear-view mirror when you’re going 80mph just for the heck of it.
I’ve been pretty fortunate with the repair folks who have helped us. There were a few occasions when I was being worked over and I played along with the charade.
It seems like any chicanery aimed towards me can be nipped in the bud.
“Let me show you how to change that light fixture. I’ll squeeze us some fresh lemonade for when you’re done.”
Mike Tasos has lived in Forsyth County for more than 30 years. He’s an American by birth and considers himself a Southerner by the grace of God. He can be reached at miketasos55@gmail.com.
26 | March 23, 2023 | Johns Creek Herald | AppenMedia.com/Johns_Creek OPINION 210 Ingram Ave. Cumming, 30040 770.887.2388
family serving your family since 1928. On site crematory • Serving all faiths
Burials • Cremation • Prearrangements Out-of-state transportation
ingramfuneralhome.com Our
Offering:
Columnist PEXELS
THE ECOLOGY OF SANDY SPRINGS
What: Join this exploration into the ecology of Sandy Springs led by Alan Toney, a master naturalist. Explore the loss of the original pristine forest and the regrowth of the mature second-growth forest. Discover what’s living in your own backyard and how proper landscaping can encourage as well as discourage wildlife from taking up residence. Learn about the relationship between raptors and crows, the importance of native bees and insects, how to get rid of those pesky invasives and more.
When: Tuesday, March 28, 7 p.m.
Where: Lost Corner Preserve, 7300 Brandon Mill Road, Sandy Springs
More info: sandyspringsga.gov
COMMUNITY:
SNAP!DRAGON’S GARDEN OPENING RECEPTION
What: Spring has sprung at the Dunwoody Community Garden. Visit the event for an afternoon of Instagramworthy selfies, free popcorn and garden-themed goodies for kids. Moondog Growlers will be on site with beverages available for purchase. Exhibit runs until April 1.
Where: Brook Run Park, 4770 North Peachtree Road, Dunwoody
When: Saturday, March 25, 11 a.m.-2 p.m.
More info: dunwoodyga.gov
HEALTHY FOREST LECTURE WITH INTERPRETATIVE HIKE
What: If we understand the soil of today, then we can better understand the forest of tomorrow. This program will cover seed bank, soil science, soil horizon, soil testing, limiting factors, mycorrhizae, richness, biodiversity, urban forestry, fungal network (mycelium), nutrient uptake, nutrient fixing and root grafts. Participants can submit soil samples to UGA and begin a soil composition index.
When: Friday, March 24, 12:30 p.m.
Where: Lost Corner Preserve, 7300 Brandon Mill Road, Sandy Springs
More info: sandyspringsga.gov
DUNWOODY FARMERS MARKET
What: The Dunwoody Farmers Market brings together a variety of vendors selling local and organic fruits, veggies and produce, coffee, breakfast, baked goods, prepared meals, frozen treats, eggs, grass-fed meat and fresh seafood.
When: Saturday, March 25, 10 a.m.12 p.m.’
Where: Brook Run Park, 4770 North Peachtree Road, Dunwoody
More info: dunwoodyga.gov
FAIRY HOUSE OR GNOME HOME WORKSHOP
What: After a long, cold winter, the
fairy houses and gnome homes are ready for a refresh. Bring your imagination to the first Spring Fairy House and Gnome Home event. Kids and adults will be provided with natural materials like seed pods, pinecones, bark and nuts to build a structure to take home or to leave at Lost Corner for all to enjoy. Registration is encouraged but walk-ins are welcome.
When: Saturday, April 1, 10 a.m.
Where: Lost Corner Preserve, 7300 Brandon Mill Road, Sandy Springs
Cost: $15 per person, $30 per family More info: sandyspringsga.gov
ARTISTIC AFFAIR
What: Building off the success of last year’s groundbreaking fundraising event, Spruill Center for the Arts presents “Artistic Affair: An Arts Experience” to be held at Factory Atlanta. The fundraiser and auction will include a DJ, magician and fortune tellers, live art painting, open bar, hors d’oeuvres and more.
When: Friday, March 24, 7-10 p.m.
Where: Factory Atlanta, 5616 Peachtree Road, Chamblee
Cost: $75
More info: spruillarts.org/artisticaffair
JUST FOR FUN:
STUDIO SERIES: MICHELLE MALONE
What: Closing the Studio Series, songwriter and modern-day guitar hero Michelle Malone brings her unique mix of roadhouse rock ’n roll, blues, gospel, country-soul and folk to the stage.
When: Thursday, March 23, 8 p.m.
Where: Studio Theatre, 1 Galambos Way, Sandy Springs
Cost: $20-30
More info: sandyspringsga.gov
CITY SPRINGS THEATRE COMPANY’S ‘SPAMALOT’
What: Join King Arthur, the Knights of the Round Table and the glamorous Lady of the Lake as they turn the Arthurian legend on its ear in their
quest for the Holy Grail. Along the way they encounter dancing showgirls, flying cows, killer rabbits and assorted French people. The production is the winner of the 2005 Tony Award for Best Musical.
When: Up to March 26, times vary
Where: Byers Theatre, 1 Galambos Way, Sandy Springs
Cost: $37-100
More info: sandyspringsga.gov
ROSWELL DANCE THEATRE PRESENTS ‘MARY POPPINS’
What: Follow Mary Poppins as she adds sunshine, adventure and magic to the previously solemn and serious Banks home. Join Jane and Michael as practically perfect Mary introduces them to the charming Bert. They explore the rooftops of London, enjoy a spoonful of sugar, fly a kite and do it all in the most delightful way.
When: March 30-April 1, times vary
Where: Byers Theatre, 1 Galambos Way, Sandy Springs
Cost: $30
More info: citysprings.com
‘THE NICETIES’ AT STAGE DOOR THEATRE
What: Zoe is a young Black student at a liberal arts college. What begins as a polite clash in perspectives of the founding fathers between her and her liberal, tenured professor explodes into a tightrope of what it means to hear and what it means to listen.
When: Up to April 2, 7:30-9:30 p.m.
Where: Stage Door Theatre, 5339 Chamblee Dunwoody Road, Dunwoody
Cost: $35 for adults, $20 for students, $15 for children
More info: stagedoortheatrega.org/ the-niceties/
FEATURE YOUR EVENT ONLINE AND IN PRINT!
It’s even easier now than ever to promote your event to hundreds of thousands of people, whether online, through our newsletters or in the Crier and Herald newspapers.
To promote your event, follow these easy steps:
1. Visit AppenMedia.com/Calendar;
2. Provide the details for your event including title, description, location and date;
3. Click the red button that reads “Create event”
4. That’s it! Submissions are free, though there are paid opportunities to promote your event in print and online.
Delivering Readers Award-Winning Newspapers
2022 Georgia Press Association
1st – Health Care Advertising
1st – Serious Column
1st – Investigative Reporting
1st – Food Advertising
1st – Signature Page
2nd – News Photograph
2nd – Feature Writing
2nd – Food Advertising
2nd – Service Advertising
2nd – Special Issues/Sections
2nd – Business Writing
3rd – Business Writing
3rd – Page One
3rd – Locals News Coverage
3rd – Spot News Photograph
3rd – Breaking News Writing
3rd – Lifestyle Feature Column
2022 Association of Community Publishers
1st – Orig. Editorial Photo Sports
1st – Orig. Writing Opinion
1st – Orig. Writing Sports
2nd – Feature Article Layout
2nd – Front Page Special Section
3rd – Orig. Editorial Photo Feature
3rd – Food & Drink Single Ad Color
3rd – Grocery/Liquor Single Ad Color
3rd – Special Promotion/Section Stand-Alone Gloss
AppenMedia.com/Johns_Creek | Johns Creek Herald | March 23, 2023 | 27 CALENDAR
28 | March 23, 2023 | Johns Creek Herald | AppenMedia.com/Johns_Creek
AppenMedia.com/Johns_Creek | Johns Creek Herald | March 23, 2023 | 29
30 | March 23, 2023 | Johns Creek Herald | AppenMedia.com/Johns_Creek
AppenMedia.com/Johns_Creek | Johns Creek Herald | March 23, 2023 | 31 Solution CH IP BA R RA TE AA RE TA CI T EV IL RY AS AL EP H FETA TE N AI LS ED IS ON SK I RUN PA UL IN TE RS TE LL AR G RUN T SH EE T EL I RA NG SC OU R SA LA AI T ST AN D ET HY L FL OW ER PE OP LE AL OE AS TH MA SH RI LL VASE OA F MO AT LE ED S BU NT ES NE SN ID E AN TE WE IR EL S ADAR
32 | March 23, 2023 | Johns Creek Herald | AppenMedia.com/Johns_Creek