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VOLUME 25, NUMBER 46
FEBRUARY 14, 2020
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DeKalb County CEO Michael Thurmond to deliver 2020 State of the County Addresses
Councilmember Rob Turner confers with Councilmember Jazzmin Cobble during the Feb. 10 special called meeting. Photo by Glenn L. Morgan/OCG News
Judicial hearing to determine if Stonecrest Councilmember Cobble must forfeit her seat after too many absences
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tonecrest City officials have filed a declaratory judgment action to ask a superior court judge to decide whether Councilmember Jazzmin Cobble must vacate her seat because she missed too many City Council meetings last year, based on the city’s charter. Four members of the City Council staged a protest and walked out of the City Council meeting on Feb. 10 after a motion failed to excuse Cobble’s absences retroactively. Due to the walkout, there was not a quorum to decide on several key issues including a vote on the bond deal through which the city would borrow the money needed to purchase the Sears building and the Sam’s building. Cobble’s attendance came under scrutiny after citizens Saira Willingham and Michelle Emmanuel requested the 2019 attendance records for all City Council members. The requests from Willingham and Emmanuel were made on Jan. 20, according to emails obtained by On Common Ground News through Georgia’s open records laws. Cobble, who represents District 3, was the youngest person elected to the city council at the time of her election in March 2017. Under the city's charter, Section 2.03 (a) states that a council person forfeits his or her office by “failing to attend one-third of the
regular meetings of the council in a three-month period without being excused by the council.” Cobble missed City Council meetings on Sept. 23 and Oct. 14, according to city records. Cobble told On Common Ground News the absences were work related, but declined to discuss the matter further stating that her attorney would provide comment on her behalf at a later time. After discovering that Cobble missed the allotted number of meetings, City Clerk Megan Reid said City Attorney Winston Denmark contacted Cobble by phone on Feb. 6 to notify her that she had missed two of six scheduled city council meetings during a threemonth period in 2019, resulting into a forfeiture of her seat, according to the city charter. Reid said on the same day, she, Attorney Tom Kurrie and Mayor Jason Lary met with the other four council members in pairs to discuss the matter. They held a 6:30 a.m. breakfast meeting with Councilmembers Tammy Grimes and Rob Turner at the I-HOP restaurant in Stonecrest. They met with Councilmembers Jimmy Clanton and George Turner at 11 a.m. at City Hall. That afternoon, Councilmember George Turner requested a special called meeting to be held on Feb. 10 at 4:30 p.m. to vote the matters, listing two agenda items: “Excused
absences” and “Withdrawal of lawsuit in the name of the city,” according to an email obtained by On Common Ground News. Councilmember George Turner stated in the email that he had the support of Councilmembers Rob Turner and Tammy Grimes to hold the special called meeting. According to the city’s charter, Sec. 2.09.(e), “Special meetings of the city council may be held on the call of either the mayor and one councilmember or three councilmembers.” An intense debate took place at the special called meeting. The council deadlocked 2-2 on Councilmember Rob Turner's motion to retroactively excuse Cobble for the absences. Councilmember George Turner supported the motion. Mayor Lary and Councilmember Clanton voted against excusing the absences. Grimes was not allowed to vote because she had not been elected and therefore could not retroactively excuse a councilmember’s absence and Cobble was the subject of the vote and therefore disqualified, city officials said in a statement. Councilmember Rob Turner said during the special called meeting that although the council did not formally approve Cobble’s absences, he believed that the notifications from Cobble to the city clerk were sufficient “for an excused absence.” Cobble
SEE HEARING page 11
DeKalb County CEO Michael Thurmond will give his outlook for 2020 during two State of the County addresses in March. Business leaders and other community partners are invited to a State of the County address to be delivered during a luncheon on Wednesday, March 18, 11:30 a.m. to 1 CEO Michael Thurmond p.m., at the DeKalb-Peachtree Airport, 2000 Airport Road, Chamblee. The ticketed business luncheon is hosted by the Council for Quality Growth and DeKalb Chamber of Commerce. Registration is required. To register for the luncheon, visit www.councilforqualitygrowth.org. Thurmond will deliver an evening State of the County Address to the community on Thursday, March 19, 7 p.m., at the Lou Walker Senior Center, 2538 Panola Road, Stonecrest. The evening State of the County event is free and open to the public. For more information about the evening State of the County event, contact Nichole Simms at jnsimms@ dekalbcountga.gov or 404-371-2552.
DeKalb Commissioner Larry Johnson welcomes Lidl grocery store to Memorial Drive DeKalb County Commissioner Larry Johnson recently met with the partners of Lidl grocery store to welcome them to District 3. “We are in need of a grocery store that offers affordable fresh food in this community,” Commissioner Johnson said. “Change is inevitable and I am glad to be a part of this positive Larry Johnson change to offer the highest quality of produce and service to constituents of District 3.” On Feb. 4, the Board of Commissioners unanimously approved the zoning plans for the 29,000-square-foot store to be built in the Parkview Station Shopping Center on Memorial Drive, near the Kirkwood and East Lake communities. Lidl will break ground in the spring and be ready to open spring of 2021, Johnson said. Johnson said he has received a commitment from Lidl to partner with him to hold a job fair to hire community residents ahead of the opening. “We cannot bring in new economic development and then not offer jobs to the community,” Johnson said. “Everyone deserves an opportunity to be a part of the progressive growth.”
SEE LIDL page 11