CrossRoadsNews, October 14, 2017

Page 1

FINANCE

YOUTH

High value training

Gardeners in the making

Women and minority business owners in the fashion world can build marketing and other skills at Macy’s annual workshop. 4

Kids from Stoneview and Marbut elementary schools are planting fruits and vegetables at Lucious Sanders Rec Center. 8

Let’s Keep DeKalb Peachy Clean Please Don’t Litter Our Streets and Highways

EAST ATLANTA • DECATUR • STONE MOUNTAIN • LITHONIA • AVONDALE ESTATES • CLARKSTON • ELLENWOOD • PINE LAKE • REDAN • SCOTTDALE • TUCKER • STONECREST

Copyright © 2017 CrossRoadsNews, Inc.

October 14, 2017

Volume 23, Number 24

www.crossroadsnews.com

New mobile health clinic to visit kids at four DeKalb schools By Rosie Manins

DeKalb Schools Superintendent Dr. R. Stephen Green, who cut the ribbon, said it was a momentous occasion for the county, the school district, and the students and families who will benefit. “I was concerned about wrap-around services and what we can do beyond the classroom,” he said. “We think this is going to sustain us for years and years to come.” The KDOW clinic and its customized RV, worth about $140,000, will initially visit just four DeKalb elementary schools – Snapfinger, Flat Rock, Fairington and Panola Way – with a combined student population

DeKalb Schools Superintendent Dr. R. Stephen Green (third from right) cuts the ribbon on Kids Doc on Wheels along with health and education professionals on Oct. 12.

An unconventional new medical clinic for children is about to hit the road in DeKalb County, providing free health assessments and treatments for students with little or no access to paid services. The nonprofit Kids Doc On Wheels (KDOW) mobile medical clinic, launched in conjunction with several of the county’s top doctors, dentists, nurses and other health professionals, begins operation on Oct. 16. It will see its first DeKalb Schools patients the following week. More than 30 people attended the Oct. 12 ribbon-cutting ceremony in Stone Mountain. Please see CLINIC, page 2

Rosie Manins / CrossRoadsNews

Abandoned hotel will mar Stonecrest no more Eyesore removed to make room for new lodging By Jennifer Ffrench Parker

The unfinished shell of a hotel that had marred the landscape and hotel row at the Mall of Stonecrest for 11 years was reduced to rubble this week. A crew from Stockbridge-based Zenon and Zenon Contractors Inc. knocked the abandoned six-story hotel to the ground to make way for one or two new hotels that Stonecrest Mayor Jason Lary says the new city needs to provide accommodations for the people and tourists he is expecting. He said that the structure’s demolition fulfills a promise made to Stonecrest residents when he sought office. Jason Lary “One of our first commitments to citizens was that we would take this building down this year,” he said. “We are keeping our word.” When Eagle Hotel Management Co. began construction on the 97,350-square-foot hotel at 7840 Stonecrest Square in April 2008, it was to be a 122-room Holiday Inn & Suites Conference Center with 10,000 square feet of meeting space. But in the midst of the economic depression and real estate bust that swept the country in mid-2008, the complex, then estimated to cost $16.2 to $16.5 million was never completed. Lary said part of having a new city is to take control of zoning and planning. “This would not stand in Buckhead,” he said. “It wouldn’t stand in Brookhaven and it won’t stand in Stonecrest.” The demolition came after the city issued a letter of code violation of the city’s abandoned building ordinances to the property’s

Jennifer Ffrench Parker/ CrossRoadsNews

The unfinished hotel building was abandoned in 2008. Demolished began Oct. 11 and was expected to be completed Oct. 13.

owners and gave them 90 days to comply. Al Ferrell, Stonecrest code enforcement manager, said that shortly after speaking with the owners, he noticed an application for demolition and a schedule to comply with the ordinance. Orlando Zenon said Thursday that it would take his company two days to demolish the structure. He expected to finish “bringing it down” by Friday. Lary, armed with large blue-handled sledgehammer, had hoped to put the first

blow to the cinder block and steel structure on the morning of Oct. 11 before television cameras, but he held off to await the arrival of demolition equipment, which did not arrive until late afternoon. Stonecrest’s hotel row currently has a 71-room Comfort Suites that opened in 2008, a Fairfield Inn & Suites that opened in November 2006, a Hilton Garden Inn that opened June 2005, and the Hyatt Place that opened in December 2002. Lary said that for Stonecrest to bring the

type of development and tourism it is planning, it must have more hotel space. Developers have announced a $200 million, 200-acre Atlanta Sports City development that is expected to get underway before the end of the year. Lary said that Rupa and Yash Patel, who own the 3.34-acre property, are meeting with hotel franchises to determine the hotel brand that will be built. “They will start moving the dirt in December,” he said.


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