03-18-2016 Sandy Springs Reporter

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MAR. 18 - MAR. 31, 2016 • VOL. 10 — NO. 6

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Perimeter Business ► Airbnb in the ‘burbs PAGE 5

► Mixed-used project rising near North Springs MARTA PAGE 11

SPECIAL SECTION | P24-27

It’s a brand new season!

Residents fear what’s down the road with Hammond Drive widening study BY JOHN RUCH johnruch@reporternewspapers.net With a new study of widening central Hammond Drive coming soon and the city buying up houses for right of way, residents are voicing fears of the neighborhood’s destruction. “At this point, the rallying cry is, ‘Save the neighborhood,’” said Steve Oppenheimer, president of the Glenridge Hammond Neighborhood Association, adding that the roadwidening is an old and controversial idea See HAMMOND on page 17 PHIL MOSIER

From left, Jenna Keiser, Emily George, McKenna Reas, Caroline Funderburke and Mary McLaughlin, front, members of the “Gators” girls’ softball team, participate in the Sandy Springs Youth Sports opening ceremonies parade March 12 at the Morgan Falls Athletic Complex.

FAITH Easter: Busy time of year for churches

“More trains.”

OUT & ABOUT Local beers and local bands

“Make more roadways.”

BY JOHN RUCH johnruch@reporternewspapers.net

“Gondolas, please.”

Sandy Springs City Councilman Graham McDonald has resigned to run for a state House seat, a move that incumbent Rep. Joe Wilkinson (R-Atlanta) said “blindsided” him. A special election will be held to fill his City Council seat. McDonald, an attorney, is one of two candidates challenging Wilkinson, the District 52 representative, in the May 24

Three di�fering opinions o�fered by respondents to our new 1Q poll on how best to solve metro Atlanta’s

Page 19

transporta�ion troubles. See Commentary PAGE 13

Page 22

HEARING LOSS? MEMORY LOSS? THEY HAVE THE SAME SYMPTOMS. Which one is it?

www.hearatlanta.com

McDonald resigns for House run; special election to be scheduled

See SANDY on page 14


2 | Community

Facebook.com/TheReporterNewspapers ■ twitter.com/Reporter_News

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A grocery store may come to the North River Shopping Center on northern Roswell Road. Preliminary plans filed with the city show a 36,000-square-foot new grocery store and its parking replacing a building at 8877 Roswell Road at the northern end of the shopping center. The plan does not include a particular grocery store brand. Billy Stark, a representative for the developer, declined to comment. The project would require rezoning to allow the grocery store use and possible concurrent variances for parking and setback, according to a city filing. A preliminary community meeting is scheduled for March 21 at 7 p.m. at the Stars and Strikes entertainment facility in the shopping center at 8767 Roswell Road.

CITY LIM ITS R EZO NI NG C A S ES T O FIV E P ER M O NTH To handle a wave of major redevelopment proposals, the city is cutting the number of rezoning cases it will process each month from seven to five. “Anything we can do to slow things down sounds good to me,” said Assistant City Manager Jim Tolbert at a Feb. 26 Sandy Springs City Council work session where the rezoning case reduction was discussed. The council unanimously approved the reduction at its March 1 meeting. City development staff had expressed concerns about the workload of handling gigantic, complex rezoning cases at the same time consultants are rewriting the city’s zoning code and land-use plan. The restriction means that only five rezoning cases per month can move forward to city Planning Commission review. And of those five per month, only one can be a Development of Regional Impact, meaning a major project that meets a size threshold for Atlanta Regional Commission review.

M AR TA CEO TO SPEA K AT T R A NS P O R TATI O N S UM M I T 1067 Mabry Oaks Drive

3182 Windsor Lake Drive

sold

sold

sold

310 Windsor Gate Cove

280 Windsor Gate Cove

780 Starlight Lane

700 Starlight Drive

725 Glenforest Drive

1105 Camden Court sold

sold

775 East Powderhorn sold

sold

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215 Windsor Gate Cove sold

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3163 Windsor Lake Drive

6155 Aberdeen Drive sold

MARTA CEO Keith Parker will join local and regional officials in a “transportation summit” panel discussion March 29 hosted by Leadership Sandy Springs. Other panelists include Chris Tomlinson, executive director of the Georgia Regional Transit Authority, which operates the Xpress commuter bus service in the top end Perimeter region; Yvonne Williams, president and CEO of the Perimeter Center Improvement Districts, which carries out many transportation projects and is joining Perimeter Center cities in a study of alternative transit options; and Bryant Poole, a Sandy Springs assistant city manager overseeing transportation projects. David Rubinger, publisher of the Atlanta Business Chronicle, will moderate. The transportation summit will be held at the Wyndham Atlanta Galleria hotel on Powers Ferry Road, which happens to be along the I-285 corridor regularly choked with Cobb County commuter traffic. The summit runs 11:30 a.m. to 1:30 p.m. at the hotel at 6345 Powers Ferry Road. Admission is $25 (LSS members $20), and RSVPs are required by March 23 by emailing ellen@leadershipsandysprings.org or visitingleadershipsandysprings.org.

WIND SO R PAR KWAY REO P ENS A FTER EM ER G ENC Y R EPA IR S Windsor Parkway at Jolyn Place in Sandy Springs reopened March 12, nearly two months after a stormwater project threatened to undermine the roadway, according city spokeswoman Sharon Kraun. The city hired a new contractor to conduct emergency repairs on Feb. 22 and estimated that the work could take months. But the contractor was able to complete the repairs ahead of that schedule, according to Kraun.

B ELL TO WER R ISES

4605 Peachtree Dunwoody Road

714 Creek Garden Court

1303 Riverscall Lane

Information believed accurate but not warranted. Equal Housing Opportunity.

Dawn Anderson

top 10% companywide abr multi-million dollar club life member

404.433.7849 Cell 404.352.2010 Office dawnanderson@dorseyalston.com One Hundred West Paces Ferry Rd. Atlanta, Ga 30305

A new 64-foot-tall bell tower memorializing children who die of abuse or neglect was recently completed at Holy Innocents’ Episcopal Church, 805 Mount Vernon Highway. Commissioned last year, the tower features 100 funeral urn spaces where the unclaimed remains of children may be interred. The bells were to ring for the first time during Easter services March 26.

SS


MAR. 18 - MAR. 31, 2016

Community | 3

www.ReporterNewspapers.net

Moonshine, cartoons and convicts

New publication tells old tales of Sandy Springs history BY JOHN RUCH johnruch@reporternewspapers.net

From moonshine busts to a church founded in a mansion, the Sandy Springs Gazette is publishing old news in a new way. The new digital magazine created by Heritage Sandy Springs showcases stories from the historical society’s evergrowing library of oral histories. Debuted on the Heritage website Jan. 7, the publication features a new historical story—illustrated with archival photos—every Thursday. “The reason we started the Gazette was to take the oral histories…off the shelf and into the community,” said Melissa Swindell, Heritage’s director of historic resources and education programs. Heritage began recording oral histories from Sandy Springs residents on audio cassettes in the late 1980s or early 1990s, Swindell said. About 65 oral histories are now on file, and most go untouched, she said. Heritage board member Chip Emerson suggested a digital magazine as a way to highlight stories from the oral histories, Swindell said. “We thought

GEORGIA STATE UNIVERSITY, SPECIAL COLLECTIONS

Heritage Sandy Springs has created a new digital magazine, the Sandy Springs Gazette, featuring oral histories on such topics as a littleknown prison camp along Roswell Road in the late 1800s, above.

that this format was the most dynamic and most interactive way to get the history across,” Swindell said. A digital magazine follows the format of a printed magazine, with pages that can be flipped. Most of the articles also include links to the full recording and written transcript of the oral history interviews. Most articles don’t cov-

er entire interviews, which can run for hours, but instead highlight an interesting topic. Gazette articles so far have covered the history of such local landmarks as Roswell Road and the Mount Vernon Presbyterian Church, but some delve into more unusual topics, such as a 1940s moonshine still raid. Another ar-

Parks & Recreation Master Plan Survey

Be sure to respond!

...mailed out mid-March

PAnswer the Survey. PVisit Project Page. PShare Your Ideas. dunwoodyga.gov/2016ParksMasterPlan

Email us at parks@dunwoodyga.gov

A Parks & Recreation Master Plan Survey has been mailed out to a random selection of 5,000 Dunwoody households. Instructions for completing the survey via the web using an individualized ID/password will be included. Answer the survey and help create a better Dunwoody! SS

ticle highlights the cartoon strip “Mark Trail,” the creation of longtime Sandy Springs resident Ed Dodd, whose country home sat near a street now named for the cartoon. A late 1800s prison camp along Roswell Road is another little-known piece of local lore. It was part of a highly controversial practice of renting out prisoners for labor, a system protesters likened to slavery and that eventually got banned. “The convict camp in Sandy Springs [was] where Whole Foods is today,” Swindell said. “That’s part of our lost history…[a] part of our history that shuffled away and people didn’t want to talk about,” but is relevant to modern times, she said. “It just shows how diverse the history of Sandy Springs is,” said Swindell. Swindell said there are enough oral histories to last about two years and that Heritage Sandy Springs welcomes more residents to have their memories recorded. For more information, contact Swindell at mswindell@heritagesandysprings.org or 404-851-9111 ext. 2. To read the Gazette, go to heritagesandysprings.org.

Dunwoody

aster creation M Parks & Re

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Five win    ected to    name randomly sel  address   a $50 Visa    each receive zip     city st the     car   ate  d. efforts toupd for gift ,   our rts  ent  of t sid effo   as par nni  Dear Re ng pla   your input  ing p direct our  forthe   ply  g, sim is asking for  s  com vey will hel     Dunwoody the drawin n. The sur and service  ed   grams  The City of   To enter enclos n Master Pla    ng with pro out the  Recreatio ns   utes to fill   facilities alo  Parks and w the directio a few min   follo recreation    ing and  tak the  ks by  rt   public par  the bottom of    ses at port this effo d   sup   vide   ase pro    pon r res d years. Ple you    pon   , so  res  vey  you      sur if     Or, this survey.  page.      s received facilitiesand   old se the seh the will  e      and   orta use  pling of hou , you will hav nt  imp  you do not ine if sam  are onl n    . dom ses Eve   ied s. pon   Only a ran enter the  . ALL res  areas identif  to the proces to t  you nt  tric nity dis orta from  ortu  city   opp  iate hearing are very imp   , or by the   ting the  still apprec aggregate    after comple   of your services, we ntial and reported in  drawing  ers mb  me in  er  fide  the   nnaire with  nswith oth stio  . Winners of be kept con  stio  survey   turn your que owing que   ns. Re   cuss the foll g will be ensureall  pe you to dis bined opinioaid to  envelo random drawin   We invite s reflect com tag  e-p  ne and/or  so answer dressed, pos     tacted by pho household ed self-ad con   los    enc  te we  the ng the bsi 10 days in   usi ed.   d, ord   ail. tea rec   em are  online ins vey    responses  sur  the te       comple   ed:   vid , you may  pro ces  rd our    swo  : xxxxx    To save res ord   with the pas   ssw       logging in   pa rvey.org   future    below and  woodysu    nning of       www.dun your time. The pla   ck from       nk dba  for     fee      tha you es on the          ticipation ands in Dunwoody reli         iate your par service      We apprec    facilities and      recreation     parks and          nts!      ide    res    our        g, atin   ticip     par        sincerely for      Thank you                                                          r lke        ector Brent Wa rn    creation Dir     win, and retu e  Parks & Re    tion if you    plet   for notifica (Note: if you com   phone number  03.  e and  instead.)     g ey lder, CO803 that   vey Drawin  your first namd, Sui  te 360, Bou of  surv    woody Sur se provide  rmation at theend Roa e  plea g, elin win Bas City of Dun     4770  tact info prize dra    Associates, to provide your con red in the    To be ente your survey to RRC nity     :  the opportu   ne Number  this slip with ne, you will have  Daytime Pho   onli   the survey    address:  /or e-mail  and  e: Nam  First     


4 | Community

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90 Years of Experience Serving World-class Patients

Multi-use trail, on-street parking planned for Sandy Springs Circle BY JOHN RUCH johnruch@reporternewspapers.net

ZoAnnA Scheinfeld, MS, dMd novy Scheinfeld, ddS dd nAAnci nci lubell, dMd Md Sidney R. Tou ouRiAl iA , ddS iA

290 Carpenter Drive, 200A Sandy Springs, GA 30328

Right Smile Center.com

404-256-3620

A largely sidewalk-free stretch of Sandy Springs Circle will get a multiuse trail, and two of its travel lanes will be converted to on-street parking, in a major redesign scheduled for early 2017. The $7 million project targets the third-of-a-mile section of Sandy Springs Circle between Hammond Drive and Mount Vernon Highway. JOHN RUCH A major redesign brings a multi-use trail and While the work is still a year away, on-street parking to Sandy Springs Circle. To see the city held an open house to review a larger version, go to ReporterNewspapers.net. the designs on March 9 at the Sandy Springs United Methodist Church Activities Center. More than 50 residents attended in the open house’s first hour, expressing general approval of sidewalks, but voiced concerns on whether the project would worsen traffic. City consultants and officials said it won’t and that a traffic study has been done. The more pedestrian-friendly design is part of the city’s 2012 City Center Master Plan proposal for the street, which runs past Heritage Sandy Springs’ historic site and two shopping centers. The plan calls for roomy walkways separated from street traffic by wide strips of grass. The west side of the street would get a 12-foot-wide multi-use path in addition to a 6-foot-wide pedestrian-only sidewalk. The east side would get a 10-foot-wide sidewalk, reduced to 8 feet along Heritage Green Park to reduce right of way impact. Both sides of the street would get new trees, though some likely will be removed for the project as well. Currently two lanes in each direction, the street would be converted to one lane each way. About 75 on-street parking spaces would be added on both sides of the street, largely as a traffic-calming measure, and partial medians with left-turn lanes would be installed. The actual pavement’s current width of 48 feet would remain the same. © 2016 The Joint Corp.

What life does to your body, we undo. Chiropractic is key to a healthy lifestyle. When pain is actively managed, patients feel better, sleep better, and are better equipped to deal with the demands of everyday life. And, maintenance care helps prevent pain, improve nerve communication and keep your joints—and therefore you—moving at your best. Let our licensed chiropractors relieve your everyday aches and pains in a way that works for everyday life. Visit thejoint.com to learn more.

NO APPOINTMENTS NO INSURANCE NEEDED OPEN EVENINGS & WEEKENDS Relief. On So Many Levels.

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FREE INITIAL VISIT *

Buckhead North at Chastain Square 4279 Roswell Rd., Suite 202 Atlanta, GA 30342

Brookhaven 305 Brookhaven Ave. Bldg. 1100, Suite B-1165 Atlanta, GA 30319

*Offer valued at single visit rate. Initial visit includes consultation, exam and adjustment. Present offer at time of redemption at the location listed only. No cash value, not valid towards past purchase. See clinic for chiropractor(s)’ name and license info. Clinics managed and/or owned by franchisee or Prof. Corps. Restrictions may apply to Medicare eligible patients. Individual results may vary. © 2016 The Joint Corp. All Rights Reserved.

(678) 813-8999

(404) 262-1515

includes consultation, exam & adjustment.

Buckhead 3330 Piedmont Rd., Suite 4 Atlanta, GA 30305 (404) 584-2323

thejoint.com SS


MAR. 18 - MAR. 31, 2016

Perimeter Business | 5

www.ReporterNewspapers.net

Perimeter Business A monthly section focusing on business in the Reporter Newspapers communities

Airbnb in the ’burbs

New hotels, apartments proposed for Concourse, Pill Hill sites

BY JOHN RUCH johnruch@reporternewspapers.net

“Cozy room in suburbia!” reads a listing on Airbnb.com, offering travelers a bedroom on a quiet Dunwoody street for $68 a night. The room may be illegal as well as cozy, according to the city of Dunwoody, whose zoning bans lodging in residential areas. It’s among dozens of short-term online housing rentals available along the northern Perimeter, ranging from entire Buckhead mansions to spare bedrooms on Sandy Springs’ cul-de-sacs, that often operate in legal gray areas. City codes vary, and such rentals may evade hotel taxes or flout apartment leases and condo association rules. But that Dunwoody room, like virtually all local listings, gets glowing reviews from its guests. If the private owner or main tenant rents them quietly to keep guests and neighbors happy, it’s unlikely there will be enforcement or even any short-term rental regulations at all. That’s currently the case in Brookhaven and Sandy Springs, city officials say. “If we had [complaints], it would have

BY JOHN RUCH johnruch@reporternewspapers.net

Above, screen shots taken from the Airbnb.com website showcase rentals on everything from entire manisons in Buckhead to spare bedrooms in Sandy Springs’ cul-de-sacs to short-term stays in upscale condos with access to fitness centers and pools.

See MASSIVE on page 12

See AIRBNB on page 10

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6 | Perimeter Business

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Q&A Construction boom

Hector Montalvo

Georgia Hispanic Construction Association strives to ‘empower’ Hispanic achievement

In January, the Georgia Hispanic Construction Association moved to a new headquarters at 2750 Buford Highway in Brookhaven. The educational, advocacy and business development nonprofit, which represents about 200 members, is now a neighbor of the Latin American Association. Reporter Newspapers asked GHCA Executive Director Hector Montalvo about how his organization helps the Hispanic construction industry and the reasons it moved to offices on Buford Highway, widely known as a center for Hispanic businesses and residents. For more information, see georgiahca.com. Q: Who created the GHCA and why? A: Hispanics make up roughly 30 percent of the workforce in the construction industry. Our mission is to develop and promote the Hispanic construction

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industry in Georgia. We strive to be the leading organization that empowers Hispanic achievement. The GHCA was created by Hispanic businesses committed to the growth and development of the Hispanic construction business. The catalyst for rebuilding the organization was a published disparity study from the city of Atlanta where Hispanic companies were not classified as minorities. The founding members felt the study did not reflect actual conditions, and in fact, there was a lack of representation of Hispanic companies in construction in the city of Atlanta. The 2015 disparity study report accurately reflects that Hispanic businesses in construction are in fact a minority. Q: Why did the Georgia Hispanic Construction Association move to Buford Highway? Where was it located previously? A: The GHCA was founded about four years ago, just when the construction industry was getting a pulse and resources were in short supply. As an avenue to keep cost to a minimum, one of the founding members offered to provide office space. After four years and a change in leadership, the board determined that it was time to move to an independent office. After considering several options, we felt there was synergy between the two associations, the GHCA and the Latin American Association (LAA). The new location offered the advantage of collaboration as well as a well-known location to the Hispanic community. Q: What are some examples of recent training programs GHCA has offered and government relations efforts it has worked on? What are the benefits for individual members as compared to member companies? A: A key mission of the GHCA is to train and educate Hispanic construction workers so they can grow safely and profitably. To that end, the GHCA has provided training such as OSHA 10 and Strategic Planning workshops to assist small companies grow their business. A company can have various advantages, depending on the membership and also the sponsorship. An individual member has access to educational and safety programs as well as meet-and-greet activi-


MAR. 18 - MAR. 31, 2016

Perimeter Business | 7

www.ReporterNewspapers.net

ties that will allow them to establish business connections and opportunities. Q: What are the requirements to become a member? Do members have to identify as Hispanic or can they just be supporters of Hispanic people in the industry? A: Our organization is based on the premises of inclusiveness, so you don’t have to be Hispanic to be a member. The idea is to have an organization where win-win is the foundation in all that we do for members, companies, sponsors and the community at large. Q: This is a boom time in the metro Atlanta construction industry. What are the particular opportunities and challenges the market presents to the workers GHCA serves? A: For members, a platform for resources to get jobs or grow new or exist-

ing businesses. For companies, a vehicle to reach the Hispanic workforce. For the community at large, an environment for learning as well as a vehicle for advocacy. Q: Does GHCA mostly serve recent immigrants or is there an established Hispanic construction industry here as well? How are the sometimes bitter political debates about immigration policy affecting the industry? A: About 84 percent of immigrant construction workers came from Latin America and 62 percent of them are reported not to speak English well or at all. Our aim is to serve the Hispanic construction industry and to be the voice for fair treatment in pay as well as working conditions. The rhetoric on immigration is hurting the industry and, if not resolved, will be detrimental to our economic stability and vitality.

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8 | Perimeter Business

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Ribbon Cuttings For The Sole Foot Massage, located at 6690 Roswell Road in Sandy Springs, celebrated its opening with a ribbon cutting on Feb. 17. On hand, Maxwell Baker, Joe Luranc, Jim Speakman, Jay Eun, Danny Eun, Sandy Springs Mayor Rusty Paul, Dee Hart, Vedam Clementi, Ethan Li and Jon Wittenberg. The business offers Thai, Swedish, body and foot massages. Get Fit Now held a ribbon cutting on Feb. 19 with William Madison Jr., Kristen Madison, Savannah Lamb, Summer Roberts, Lisa Calhoun, Joe Luranc, Dustin Napier, Emily Napier, Tiffany Roan, Beth Berger, Alyssa Matusiak, David de la Vega, Melissa Shaefer Bentley and Lindsay Resto in attendance. Located at 6780 Roswell Road, Suite C-205, in Sandy Springs, the company offers personal training, coaching and nutrition.

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MAR. 18 - MAR. 31, 2016

Perimeter Business | 9

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Great American Floors, 330 Sandy Springs Circle, held a ribbon cutting on Feb. 26. Joining the festivities: Katie and Geoff Melkonian, Jeff Kremer, Brandon Handley, Trevor Robertson, Marc Seltzer, founder, Stephanie Seltzer, Rachel Seltzer, Steve Williams, Robie Seltzer, owner, Jason Seltzer, owner, Angela Forrester and Maxwell Baker. The company sells premium floor products including carpet, hardwood, laminate and tile. ROAM, a co-working and event space, marked the grand opening of its Buckhead location at 3365 Piedmont Road with a ribbon cutting on March 1. Participants included, from left, Mary London Goshert, Courtney Vann, Lee Behr, Ples Bruce, Jim Duffie, Peyton Day, Smita Solanki, Garth Peters and David Coxon.

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10 | Perimeter Business

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been addressed long before,” said city of Sandy Springs spokeswoman Sharon Kraun. But, she added, the City Council is likely to discuss possible regulation of short-term rentals soon. Short-term rental services have become a booming—and controversial—business, allowing homeowners and apartment renters to make extra cash by arranging online room rentals. The current top dog is San Francisco-based Airbnb, which boasts millions of rental listings in nearly every country in the world. The service includes a listing, a payment service and a rating system. Short-term rentals have been especially controversial in big cities, where they can act as significant competition with hotels while avoiding the same taxes and regulations. There are also concerns that shortterm rentals inflate local housing markets, making it harder for long-term residents to afford housing. In 2014, the tourist-heavy city of Savannah, Ga., cracked down on short-term rentals as zoning violations. Little attention has been drawn to short-term rentals in suburbs and outlying urban neighborhoods, where there likely aren’t such large-scale market impacts and homeowners can often rent with more privacy. But other concerns about short-term rentals are still possible, such as absentee owners, misbehaving guests or violations of condo rules.

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One recent Airbnb listing advertised a $349-a-night “Party House in Buckhead for Events!” on residential Timm Valley Road. “Kegs cost extra…Perfect for events under 40-50 people,” the listing says. The listing dates to 2011, indicating it has operated without serious complaints. And the listing for an entire four-bedroom house for rent off Lake Forrest Drive in Sandy Springs says no parties or events are allowed. “I’m sorry about this, I’ve done it before and it’s caused too many problems…,” the host explained in the listing. Of several local short-term rental hosts contacted for interviews, only one agreed to speak, and only briefly and without publication of his name. The host rents a Perimeter Center condo on three different online services, including Airbnb, and mostly attracts business travelers. “Our condo doesn’t really allow renters,” the host admitted. “I screen [shortterm renters] really hard. I tell them, don’t send mail there.” Airbnb did not respond to questions. But according to press reports, it has beefed up its safety and accountability policies in recent years. Its website features basic city of Atlanta housing regulation information. And according to news reports, Airbnb will soon introduce a new service allowing residents at neighboring properties to file complaints about problem guests directly with the company.

Recent checks of Airbnb and Corporate Housing By Owner, a site focused on monthly, business-oriented rentals, showed plenty of local residents playing host. For the March 18 weekend, Airbnb showed about 25 rentals available in Buckhead; about 22 in Brookhaven; 16 in Dunwoody; and about 30 in Sandy Springs. On the luxury end, $350 a night scored an entire Tudor-style mansion with a saltwater swimming pool, on Buckhead’s Knollwood Drive. Bargain travelers could get a particularly safe room—“I literally live next to the police station!” the listing read—on Sandy Springs’ Spring Creek Lane. Many reviews show guests enthusiastic about local hosts and neighborhoods. “This neighborhood is one of the BEST you will find in Atlanta. It’s safe and in a beautiful historic area,” wrote a guest of a suite for rent on Mabry Road in Brookhaven. Some listings on both sites have hosts who live in other homes or even other cities and states. One CHBO condo listing on Peachtree-Dunwoody Road says the host moved out in 2010. “I have been renting to numerous guests and corporations for over 5 years,” the listing reads. Airbnb listings include some prominent local condo and apartment towers, including in Dunwoody’s Manhattan condos and Sandy Springs’ Park Towers/M789 condos/apartments complex. “If we knew about it, we probably wouldn’t allow it,” said Henry Monje, a leasing consultant at the M789 apartments. But, he said, there’s no easy way to tell apartment tenants’ paying guests from non-paying ones.

To regulate or not to regulate

Nationwide, the hotel industry is pushing for uniform regulation of short-term rentals, saying hosts should follow similar regulations and pay the same taxes and fees. In Georgia, a committee in the state House of Representatives last winter recommended against statewide regulation. “I still believe that statewide regulation makes the most sense to provide continuity across the state,” said Jim Sprouse, executive director of the Georgia Hotel & Lodging Association. The rules, or lack thereof, governing short-term rentals vary across local municipalities. Atlanta city officials did not respond to questions, but press reports indicate that short-term rentals are prohibited in single-family zoning districts. Dunwoody has similar restrictions, according to city spokesman Bob Mullen. In Brookhaven, where Airbnb founder Joe Gebbia’s father happens to be a member of City Council, “there is currently nothing in our ordinance that addresses them, and they wouldn’t fall under the hotel definition,” said city spokeswoman Ann Marie Quill. “When the business community comes up with a new model, such as Uber or growlers, it takes a little time for municipalities to adapt.”


MAR. 18 - MAR. 31, 2016

Perimeter Business | 11

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A major mixed-use project—featuring a six-story, 236-unit apartment building and a five-story office building—will start going up soon at Peachtree-Dunwoody Road and Roberts Court in Sandy Springs. Despite its size and prominent location on a 10-acre site across PeachtreeDunwoody from the North Springs MARTA station, the project by Trammell Crow Residential has been moving ahead quietly. In part, that’s because it is already allowed under a 2001 rezoning for an even bigger project that triggered a major controversy and legal battle, but never got built. A 2002 legal settlement between the Sandy Springs Council of Neighborhoods and the original developer, Sandy Springs’ Charlie Roberts, has requirements for landscape buffers and screening, including a 2-acre “conservation easement” or private park. Trammell Crow Residential will fulfill those legal obligations, according to developer attorney Chip Collins and Council of Neighborhoods president Trisha Thompson.

Coming to fruition

“The Council of Neighborhoods is very excited that this long, 10- or 12-year [project] and rezoning is finally coming to fruition with a use that is less intense than the original rezoning and is more in line with the character of the neighborhood,” said Thompson. The group is also pleased “that a large area will be set aside in a permanent conservation easement for the benefit of the entire neighborhood,” she said. Roberts’ original project was approved by Fulton County before the city of Sandy Springs incorporated. A proposed redevelopment of a site that had only a single house, it featured a 14-story apartment building, a 12-story condominium tower and a 10-story office tower, among

other uses. “What they’re doing is a lot less dense,” Collins said of Trammell Crow Residential. “The condos are gone and the apartments are less in density. The office [space] is less dense.” The office building will have about 125,000 square feet of space, and the apartment building will have some ground-floor retail area, Collins said. The apartments and offices will wrap around a shared parking deck with 643 spots, he added. The developers bought the property late last year and expect to start construction in April, Collins said. He estimated construction will last 18 to 24 months. The legal settlement has several provisions, including a $7,500 allowance to each neighboring resident to install their own landscape screening. But the biggest provision is the conservation easement, a green space with trails that will be overseen by the Sandy Springs Conservancy, according to Thompson. It will be open to abutting residents, but not the general public.

A permanent buffer

The green space will serve as a “as a permanent buffer between the development and the neighborhood,” Collins said. “It will be basically a private park. It’s not a public park.” However, the exact details of the agreement are still being discussed in meetings with the Council of Neighborhoods and area residents. Thompson said there are still some details she questions, such as screening for the parking garage. “This has been a very cooperative undertaking since Trammell Crow [Residential] has gotten involved,” Collins said, adding he does not expect any changes to the proposed agreement. “This is just about working with the neighbors to make sure we’re fulfilling all requirements of the earlier settlement.”

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12 | Perimeter Business

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Massive mixed-use plans filed for Concourse Center and Pill Hill Continued from page 5

Hearn Drive and the MARTA station. It proposes a 170-room hotel and retail space fronting on Peachtree-Dunwoody; a 5-story, 250-unit multifamily housing complex; an 8-story, 200,000-square-foot office building atop three levels of parking; a 6-level parking deck; and new restaurant and retail buildings around a pond on the site. The Pavilion site dates to the 1970s and consists of four office buildings, one of which, containing mostly medical offices, would be demolished for the retail component, according to developer rep-

tique hotel; a 5-story, 270-unit “high-end” apartment building atop a “concrete podium;” and 24,500 square feet of restaurant and retail space in three buildings, including a “chef-driven…flagship” restaurant. The development would happen near the intersection of Peachtree-Dunwoody and Hammond Drive. The Pavilion plan, according to preliminary drawings filed with the city, brings big additions to the 20-acre site at 5775 Peachtree-Dunwoody between Lake

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resentative Scott Bryant. He said no decision has been made on whether the housing would be rental or ownership. The developer, going by TSO PDP LP, bought the property last year and believes it’s a “prime candidate for a focus on urbanization” like the rest of SPECIAL An illustration of the proposed Peachtree Dunwoody the Perimeter Center Pavilion redevelopment from a city filing. The view, area, Bryant said. That looking west, shows a hotel along Peachtree-Dunwoody includes possibly tying Road at the rear and a new office building to the left. directly into the MARing to negotiate automobile traffic.” TA station with a peBuilt between 1984 and 1991, the Condestrian bridge. course complex already features more “When this was originally built, they than 2 million square feet of office space just popped buildings down and the rest and a large Westin hotel. The original was just paved. MARTA was an afterzoning of the site allows for a four-story thought,” Bryant said. “We want to take offi ce building in the area of the proposed advantage of the site in a way that’s remixed-use project, according to John Bell sponsible. We just think mixed use… of Regent Partners. That unbuilt office makes sense.” building would have been a “mirror imThe $90 million Concourse project age” of an existing offi ce structure adjacould start construction late this year or cent to the redevelopment site, he said. in early 2017, according to the fact sheet The Concourse and Pavilion plans are from co-developers Regent Partners and the latest entries in a trend of large mixedBuilding and Land Technology. According use proposals for Perimeter Center, into the fact sheet, “The new development’s cluding the Dunwoody Crown Towers, layout will be notable for its ‘pedestrian1117 Perimeter Center West and a project first’ design: buildings will be connected near the North Springs MARTA station. by alleyways and courtyards, enabling visitors to stroll the grounds without hav-

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From left, Cara Workman and Robyn Marzullo of the Sandy Springs Range & Gun Club with Chamber Board Chairman Lever Stewart.

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MAR. 18 - MAR. 31, 2016

Commentary | 13

www.ReporterNewspapers.net

Reporter Newspapers Our mission is to provide our readers with fresh and engaging information about life in their communities.

Community Survey Question: Of the following, what do you think is the best way to address metro Atlantaʼs transportation problems?

Total Respondents (200)

Published by Springs Publishing LLC 6065 Roswell Road, Suite 225 Sandy Springs, GA 30328 Phone: 404-917-2200 • Fax: 404-917-2201

7%

10%

7%

Use monorails or gondolas to connect commercial areas 19 (10%)

Atlanta INtown www.AtlantaINtownPaper.com

8%

Add more bus routes and run the buses more often 15 (8%)

56%

Founder & Publisher Steve Levene stevelevene@reporternewspapers.net Editorial Managing Editor Joe Earle joeearle@reporternewspapers.net Associate Editor: John Ruch Intown Editor: Collin Kelley Sta�f Writer: Dyana Bagby Copy Editor: Diane L. Wynocker Crea�ive and Produc�ion Crea�ive Director: Rico Figliolini Graphic Designer: Harry J. Pinkney Jr. Adver�ising Director of Sales Development Amy Arno amyarno@reporternewspapers.net Senior Account Execu�ives Jeff Kremer Janet Porter Account Execu�ives Susan Lesesne Jim Speakman O�fice Manager Deborah Davis deborahdavis@reporternewspapers.net Contributors Phil Mosier

Free Home Delivery 60,000 copies of Reporter Newspapers are delivered by carriers to homes in ZIP codes 30305, 30319, 30326, 30327, 30328, 30338, 30342 and 30350 and to more than 500 business/retail locations. For locations, check “Where To Find Us” at www.ReporterNewspapers.net For delivery requests, please email delivery@reporternewspapers.net.

© 2016 with all rights reserved Publisher reserves the right to refuse editorial or advertising for any reason. Publisher assumes no responsibility for information contained in advertising. Any opinions expressed in print or online do not necessarily represent the views of Reporter Newspapers or Springs Publishing, LLC.

Gender

Build more new roads or widen existing roads. 20 (10%)

Brookhaven Reporter | Buckhead Reporter Dunwoody Reporter | Sandy Springs Reporter www.ReporterNewspapers.net

C O NTA C T US

SS

10% 4%

Extend MARTA train lines 111 (56%)

Women 49%

Men 51%

Build more bike lanes and walking paths 14 (7%) Connect neighborhoods with streetcars 14 (7%)

Household Income

Increase the use of toll lanes 7 (4%)

MARTA is the way, our survey shows. Extending MARTA rail lines offers the best road out of metro Atlanta’s transportation mess, according to more than half the respondents to a recent cellphone-based survey of adults across the communities served by Reporter Newspapers and Atlanta INtown. Although state lawmakers have disagreed on how to pay for new MARTA train lines, 56 percent of the 200 respondents to the survey chose extension of the MARTA rail system as the best way to address local transportation troubles. Respondents who supported extending MARTA train lines mostly were younger than 40 (78.3 percent) and about evenly split between women and men (54 percent to 46 percent). Seven of 10 reported household income higher than $50,000. Two-thirds of the respondents for the second-most-favored option, building new roads, were females, and overall they were slightly older (30 percent were 40+ years old) and reported lower household incomes (30 percent under $50,000). In the exclusive survey, conducted by mobile market research company 1Q for Springs Publishing, parent company of the Reporter Newspapers and Atlanta INtown, just 10 percent of the respondents saw building new roads or widening existing ones as the best cure for metro traffic ills. That’s the same percentage as voted for monorails or gondolas as the best way to get from place to place. The least popular option? More toll roads.

What some respondents had to say More trains. 31-year-old Atlanta man MARTA rail needs to go more places and run more hours. 34-year-old Brookhaven man Make more roadways. 27-year-old Buckhead woman Additional MARTA lines are needed to connect major attractions, like the new baseball stadium. 45-year-old Sandy Springs woman Public transportation is the end game for solving transportation problems. The city needs to have a 20-year view of its future and have the commitment to building extensive public transportation routes and solutions step by step. 39-year-old Buckhead man Gondolas, please. 30-year-old Sandy Springs man

It would be nice to have MARTA not only connecting the city, but the suburbs as well. 35-year-old Brookhaven woman I think it’s a combination of things that are needed: Keep the existing MARTA infrastructure up to date and in working order with timely maintenance and repairs. Too often, there are train and bus delays due to mechanical issues or malfunctions. Next step is to expand train lines. Lastly, a lot of the MARTA employees don’t seem to care about their passengers one little bit. There are too many MARTA employees who have a real negative attitude about their jobs and the people around them. When there is an issue with a train or bus, they never communicate with the passengers and look at the passengers as nothing more than an annoyance. It sends the wrong message to people, and is a big reason why there is a low opinion of MARTA out there. 49-year-old Buckhead man

Less than 50,000 23.5%

$100,000+ 36.5%

$50-75,000 24%

$75,000100,000 15.5%

Educa�ion Post Graduate 32.5

High School 7%

BS/BA 60%

1Q is an Atlanta-based startup that has developed a technology which sends questions and surveys to a cellphone via app or text message from businesses and organizations across the country. Respondents are paid 50 cents per answer, through PayPal, for sharing their opinions. Payments may also be donated directly to charity. Sign up to be included in our local community polls at 1Q.com/reporter or by texting REPORTER to 86312. If I was able to get to work via MARTA, I would take it in a heartbeat. Take New York City, for example. Hardly anyone uses cars as they are able to get everywhere with public transit. 30-year-old Sandy Springs woman Riding MARTA can often times be unsafe, which brings high crime rates to high-end areas. Building more roads may just be the answer to the issue at hand. 26-year-old Dunwoody woman


14 | Community

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Sandy Springs Councilman McDonald resigns for House run; special election to be scheduled Continued from page 1

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Republican primary election. The other is attorney Deborah Silcox. The winner will take the office, since there is no Democratic challenger. McDonald was elected to represent City Council District 3 in 2013. He resigned the council seat on March 11, the day he qualified for the House primary. In a written statement issued March 14, McDonald said he wants to bring “Sandy Springs Solutions” to state government, referring to the city’s model of privatized services, and that he does not consider himself to be running against Wilkinson. “Representative Wilkinson is a fine and civic-spirited man,” McDonald said in the statement. “The most difficult aspect of my decision to run was that it would place us as contenders in the same election. Ultimately, I chose to run because a broad range of leadership in our community urged me to bring new energy to this legislative seat. I am mindful that no seat in government is any one person’s, it is the community’s.” In an interview, McDonald said he “most certainly” has enough experience to represent the entire House district which includes parts of Buckhead and northwest Atlanta - after a few years of representing a central Sandy Springs council district. “I’ve worked very diligently over what I consider to be four years as an in-touch community servant” and attended dozens of community meetings and events, he said. “I do believe I will able to represent the com-

munity’s desires and interests at the State House.” Silcox said she is a lifelong Sandy Springs resident and real estate attorney who is turning to politics now that her two children are in college. She is a longtime Chastain Park Conservancy board member and a new member of the Sandy Springs Society. “Sandy Springs has a great tradition of female leaders, with [the late Mayor] Eva Galambos, with [the late state Rep.] Dorothy Felton and many others,” Silcox said. “I aspire to be the next one.” Silcox said her statewide experience includes chairing the board of the state Commission for Service and Volunteerism under Gov. Nathan Deal. “I’m running because I think I’m the best person for the job,” Silcox said, adding that as a candidate she is “better than Joe…He’s older than me. I think I have the energy. I think I have that experience.” Silcox said she has more experience and deeper local roots than McDonald. McDonald said that he has met Silcox and finds her “very nice and intelligent.”

Incumbent alleges ‘blindsiding’

Wilkinson said that he had been grooming McDonald as a potential successor and was surprised by his campaign, as well as Sandy Springs Mayor Rusty Paul’s backing of McDonald. Wilkinson also complained that he told Paul at a Feb. 20 meeting that he would run for re-election, but that Paul later

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MAR. 18 - MAR. 31, 2016

Community | 15

www.ReporterNewspapers.net

unfounded.” Wilkinson also said that Silcox is a “very, very close” friend who he told to be “ready” after she “had gotten wind that Graham and Rusty SPECIAL PHOTOS were going At left, City Councilman Graham McDonald has resigned his post to run for the state House seat currently held by Rep. Joe Wilkinson (R-Atlanta), second from left. McDonald has the support of Sandy to pull this Springs Mayor Rusty Paul, center, and will also face another challenger, Deborah Silcox, right. stunt.” Asked if that means lard (R-Sandy Springs) both chose to retold people he was not running. Silcox is running to somehow weaken tire at ends of their terms. City leaders “I was blindsided, having spoken McDonald’s vote to Wilkinson’s benefit, thought it would be better to set up a to Graham on Wednesday [March 9], Wilkinson said, “I can’t really discuss good candidate now for Wilkinson’s when he assured me he was not runit, but you’re a smart man. That may seat who Willard could “mentor,” Mcning and he would very much like me be part of it. It may be trying to build Donald said, adding that Willard is also to help him to get better known in the name recognition for her to run a race, supporting his candidacy. Atlanta business community and so maybe in two years.” Paul confirmed in emails that he forth,” Wilkinson said. “I was blindsidSilcox said she indeed agrees that is endorsing McDonald and denied ed and very disappointed in him and McDonald “totally blindsided” WilkinWilkinson’s claim, adding that he supRusty.” son, but that she also took McDonald’s ported Wilkinson in his previous camMcDonald said Wilkinson indeed candidacy as an opportunity to chalpaigns. had been advising him on a possible lenge Wilkinson herself at the advice “I simply think it’s time for younger, campaign, but denied any surprises. of her political consultant, Mark Rounmore energetic leadership, an opinion “I spoke [about] specific changes of tree. She said her candidacy is not part I have shared in several conversations circumstance with him in advance of of any strategy to help Wilkinson. with Mr. Wilkinson over the past two qualifying,” McDonald said. “City lead“Not at all. There’s no plotting or speyears, including the Feb. 20 conversaers came to me upon the determinacial situation on my part in this,” Silcox tion to which he refers,” Paul said. “So, tion that the city could face two freshsaid. “I just didn’t want to go against pretending to be a victim or any allemen representatives in two years” if [Wilkinson] one on one.” gation of ‘blindsiding’ is unseemly and Wilkinson and state Rep. Wendell Wil-

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Wilkinson, who has served in the House since 2000, touted his experience and relationships as benefiting the district, which includes parts of Buckhead, Sandy Springs and Northwest Atlanta. “Experience counts,” Wilkinson said, adding that he has earned such nicknames as the “instructor pilot of the House” for his veteran status and “the Cal Ripken of the House” for never missing a day of regular or special sessions. He contrasted himself with McDonald, who “didn’t even finish his first term” in elected office. Wilkinson also noted that he is a “Buckhead boy” as well as the lead sponsor of the legislation that put the landmark incorporation of the city of Sandy Springs on the ballot. A special election is required to fill the City Council seat because there are more than 12 months left in McDonald’s term, Sandy Springs city spokeswoman Sharon Kraun said. The city clerk is working on the date and details of that election, which could be as soon as this spring or as late as the fall. The City Council will vote on an election date at its April 5 meeting. Asked whether he has any successor in mind for the council seat, McDonald would say only that he is certain there will be a number of strong candidates.


16 | Community

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Candidate filings for public office

A simple thing can save a life.

Candidates filed this month to run in the May 24 Democrat and Republican party primaries and non-partisan election. Here, listed by office, are candidates who filed for political posts representing all or part of Sandy Springs and who face contested elections either in a primary or in the November election. Filings were reported on websites published by Georgia’s Secretary of State or by the Fulton County department of registration and elections. For more information, go to www.sos.ga.gov or www.fultoncountyga.gov.

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Republican Primary Derrick Grayson Johnny Isakson (I) Mary Kay Bacallao U.S. HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES, District 6 Democratic Primary Rodney Stooksbury Republican Primary Tom Price (I) Kurt Wilson GEORGIA SENATE District 6 Democratic Primary Jaha Howard Republican Primary Hunter Hill (I) State House of Representatives

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District 40 Democratic Primary Tamara Johnson-Shealey Republican Primary Paul Maner Fran Millar (I) District 56 Democratic Primary Akhtar Sadiq Patrick Thompson Republican Primary

John Albers (I) GEORGIA HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES District 52 Republican Primary Graham Elliott McDonald Deborah Silcox Joe Wilkinson (I) District 80 Democratic Primary Taylor Bennett (I) Republican Primary Catherine Bernard Alan Cole Meagan Hanson CLERK OF SUPERIOR COURT Democratic Primary Cathelene “Tina” Robinson (I) Duvwon Quetez Robinson Republican Primary Lewis L. Pittman SHERIFF Democratic Primary Walter M. Calloway Theodore “Ted” Jackson (I) Richard B. Lankford Charles D. Rambo Tommy M. White Republican Primary Ben Cowart Shurron Green Non-partisan election Fulton County School Board, District 3 Gail J. Dean (I) Mustafa Karadeniz

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MAR. 18 - MAR. 31, 2016

Community | 17

www.ReporterNewspapers.net

SPECIAL

The city has purchased three lots on Hammond Drive and owns a fourth (starred above). The city says it is banking the property in case of a possible future widening of the road. To see a larger version of this illustration, go to ReporterNewspapers.net.

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Hammond widening study on the way; residents fear neighborhood damage Continued from page 1

never supported by a traffic study. Residents and city officials met at City Hall in early March in what both sides described as a positive first step in communications. Since the meeting, Mayor Rusty Paul and other leaders have expressed renewed interest in seeing a mass transit line running on Hammond, while Oppenheimer said any widening is a major threat to “one of Sandy Springs’ original and largest neighborhoods.” “They wanted to hear what we are doing and reassurances we have not made plans without letting them know,” said City Councilman Tibby DeJulio. “They were concerned, and rightfully so.” Officials said the city has been approved for an Atlanta Regional Commission grant to conduct a Hammond traffic study. “Of course, one of the options is always [to] do nothing,” DeJulio said. “The plan is that we need a plan.” Oppenheimer said if the study is done objectively, residents are willing to consider it. But if it supports widening, that means demolishing homes. “The Number One problem is, widening Hammond Drive would destroy our neighborhood,” Oppenheimer said. “It will remove 100 homes, more than 100 homes, from our neighborhood and sever our neighborhood into two disconnected pieces.” Hammond Drive is a major east-west connection between Mount Vernon Highway in Sandy Springs and Ashford-Dunwoody Road in Dunwoody. Most of Hammond has been expanded to various widths over the years., but the section between Roswell Road and Glenridge Drive in the Glenridge Hammond neighborhood remains two lanes. Government officials frequently call it a traffic bottleneck. Oppenheimer says it’s a street that maintains its residential character. Plans to widen that section of Hammond go back a decade, and so does neighborhood distrust. “This project has a dubious history,” Oppenheimer said. “This has had a life of its own with no [traffic study] support for so long.” Residents remain unhappy that a 2009 transit plan came without studies and with little public input, he said. Fears of a similar situation were sparked by the city’s recent purchases of three residential properties along Hammond as land-banking for the possible widening. “We’ve said we’d look at the results of SS

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the [upcoming] study,” he said. “But we’re also asking for transparency to see what’s in the request for proposals.” The shorter-term impacts of the widening discussions are a concern, too. Oppenheimer said the “cloud of uncertainty” about widening gave the city “an excuse not to install sidewalks” and led homeowners to not improve their houses. Some properties now are being redeveloped, and the city’s purchases “disrupt the natural renewal,” he said. “We’ve very upset that they’re removing homes and neighbors from our neighborhood,” Oppenheimer said. “The city has already spent close to $2 million on land speculation” and removing properties from the tax roll, he said. The city calls those purchases “protective buys” that save money in the long run, and more may be on the way if the price is right, DeJulio said.

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18 | Faith

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Communities of Faith March

Holy Week & Easter 20 24 25 PALM SUNDAY

8:30 & 11 am worship services, followed by a fellowship luncheon and our annual Easter Egg Hunt. All are invited!

MAUNDY THURSDAY

A contemplative service at 7:30 pm commemorating the first Lord’s Supper.

GOOD FRIDAY

12 noon worship service followed by a complimentary lunch in the Great Hall.

27 SUNDAY

EASTER

7 AM • 8:30 AM • 11 AM

EASTER SUNDAY

Experience the joy of Easter! The casual sunrise service is in our garden courtyard (weather permitting) at 7 am. The 8:30 and 11 am services will be filled with joyful music and decorated in a Saint Luke’s tradition: ‘flowering’ the cross with fresh blooms.

celebration March 27 11 a.m.

This Easter is doubly joyful as we welcome our new Senior Pastor, David Lower! We invite you to join us as we begin this new chapter in God’s story at Saint Luke’s.

peachtreechurch.org

1978 Mount Vernon Road Dunwoody, Georgia 30338 770.393.1424 www.slpres.org

2715 Peachtree Road, NE Atlanta 404.266.8111 | www.spdl.org

Saintartin M

in the

Fields

Palm Sunday—March 20

Sanctuary Services | 8:45, 10:00, 11:15 am Summit Services | 8:45, 11:15 am Preaching: Vic Pentz, Marnie Crumpler

Maundy Thursday—March 24 Communion Service | 7:00 pm Preaching: Chuck Roberts

Good Friday—March 25

Buckhead Community Service at Peachtree Road United Methodist | 12:00 pm

Sunday parking onsite & via bus from 7:30 am – 1:00 pm. Powers Ferry Square: 0.5 mile north of the church on the west side of Roswell Road between SunTrust Bank & Dunkin’ Donuts. Cates Center: 110 East Andrews Drive

Easter Egg Hunt—March 26

Po w er sF er ry

Chastain Park | 10:00 am–12:00 pm

Powers Ferry Square

Easter Sunday—March 27

Roswell Road

Sanctuary Services | 8:45, 10:00, 11:15 am Summit Services | 8:45, 11:15 am Preaching: Vic Pentz

sham Haber

W

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HOLY WEEK SCHEDULE

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*Children’s programs available at all services.

Peachtree Presbyterian Church | 3434 Roswell Rd. | Atlanta, Ga 30305 | 404.842.5800

CHURCH

Maundy Thursday, March 24 7:00 p.m. Good Friday, March 25 7:30 a.m., 12:00 p.m., 7:00 p.m. Easter Eve Saturday, March 26 7:00 p.m., The Great Vigil Easter Sunday, March 27 7:45 a.m., 9:30 a.m., 11:15 a.m., 5:30 p.m.

www.stmartins.org

SS


MAR. 18 - MAR. 31, 2016

Faith | 19

www.ReporterNewspapers.net

Hundreds of volunteers help prepare for Easter at the Cathedral BY JOE EARLE joeearle@reporternewspapers.net

At the Cathedral of St. Philip, Easter morning starts with a Boy Scout bonfire. Members of the big stone Episcopal church towering above Peachtree Road in the heart of Buckhead begin their Easter celebrations around a fire lit long before dawn and tended by scouts from Troop 74, which is based at the church. During that first service of the day, clergy, choir members and parishioners light candles from the fire and carry the flames into the dark church. As they sing and pray and offer praise, the sun rises outside and shines through the Cathedral’s stained glass windows, coloring the flower-filled church with morning light, said Rev. Wallace Marsh, St. Philip’s canon for worship and parish life. “It’s beautiful,” Marsh said. Other Christian churches, large and small, also host special Easter services, including ones designed to greet the Easter sunrise, the start of the day that marks the most important moment in Christianity. For large churches, the crowd of worshippers expected to celebrate the resurrection of Jesus Christ means extra services and extra effort from clergy and church members alike. At St. Philip, 2,500 to 3,000 worshipers are expected on Easter, Marsh said. Other large churches also expect the faithful to flock to church that morning. Peachtree United Methodist Church in Buckhead, for instance, expects about 4,500 to 5,000 worshippers on Easter – compared to about 1,700 attending on a typical Sunday – and has added an extra service, a fourth to be held that day, to accommodate the crowds, said Senior Minister Bill Britt. St. Philip adds two extra services on Easter Day. But Marsh, who calls himself the cathedral’s “offensive coordinator” for Easter services, says that’s just the beginning. Marsh counts Easter services as the ones staged during Easter week, which

PHOTOS BY PHIL MOSIER

Above left, parishioners attend the Cathedral of St. Philip’s Holy Eucharist Rite II service, held from 8:45 to 10 a.m. on March 13 in Buckhead. Right, Rev. C. Wallace Marsh VI delivers the sermon.

St. Philip expects between 2,500 and 3,000 worshippers to fill its pews on Easter Sunday, and will add two extra services to accommodate the crowds.

starts the Sunday before, known as Palm Sunday, and continues through the five services scheduled on Easter Day. During the week, the cathedral hosts 22 separate services, he said, including special ones on Thursday, Friday and Saturday. “It’s a wonderful week,” he said. “We call it Holy Week. It’s the holiest week of the year.” It’s also one of the busiest. Staging the various services will require contributions from hundreds of volunteers and support staff, who arrange flowers, perform music and polish silver. To keep track of everything that needs to be done, Marsh carries a clipboard, refers to stacks of notes in folders and checks a computer spreadsheet. Easter means “I pull out my clipboard and I go into coach mode,” he said. His fellow canon, Dale Adelmann, has his own spreadsheet. He plans and oversees music for the cathedral’s services. This year marks his seventh Easter, he said. “I look forward to it,” he said.

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Still, he admits, the demands of the day can be exhausting. The cathedral has three adult choirs and a children’s choir to rehearse. Come Easter morning, the first rehearsal arrives at 5:30 a.m. Still, Patrick Scott, the cathedral’s assistant organist and choirmaster, had no complaints. “It’s kind of what we live for,” he said. “It’s what we went to school for. It’s kind of why we do what we do.” About 80 adults and children will sing in the church’s choirs during Easter services, Adelmann said. During Holy Week, he said, more than 100 separate pieces of music will be performed at St. Philip. At some services, a brass quintet and a percussion player join the choir. One piece of music Adelmann has scheduled for Easter is a new one making its southeastern U.S. premiere. For many involved in staging the cathedral’s Easter Week services, the work actually begins long before Easter SunReporter Easter 2016.pdf 1 2/8/2016 11:45:18 AM

day. Laura Iarocci, co-chair of the flower guild, began ordering flowers weeks in advance of the service. Some flowers will arrive early in Holy Week, she said, and must be tended so they’ll open properly by Easter Sunday. The scouts start preparing the fire pit Friday afternoon, said Wade Hooper, a volunteer who’s worked with them for the past seven years. Come Saturday, the cathedral is alive with volunteers as the church sheds the somber tones of Lent, the period of reflection leading to Good Friday, and is remade with bright colors for Easter. “The vigor and energy of the people preparing on the Saturday before Easter feels just as much like Easter Sunday to me,” the Very Rev. Samuel Candler, dean of the cathedral, said in an email. Scouts chop wood for the bonfire. Choirs rehearse. Dozens of members of the flower guild build floral displays. Because choirs are rehearsing at the same time, “we actually cannot talk,” Iarocci said.” We cannot yell across the room or we get the evil eye.” Iarocci is preparing for her 16th Easter. This year, she said, a total of 1,439 flowers will be used to build 48 floral arrangements. A flower-covered cross will be placed on each of the cathedral’s 22 doors, she said. She’s used to coordinating large events, such as weddings, in her floral business, she said. But Easter is a bigger challenge because decorations have to be placed in just a few hours. “This is really amazing that we can pull this off,” she said. About 5:30 a.m. Easter morning, the scouts arrive. By 6 a.m., the fire is burning, Hooper said, and the first of the day’s services begin. “It is a beautifully surreal experience that evokes the powerful history and tradition of the church,” Hooper said in an email. “You feel you have been transported in time, moved by the historic importance of fire and the symbolism of reincarnation as we exit Lent and celebrate Continued on page 20


20 | Faith

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Volunteers preparing for Easter at Cathedral of St. Philip Continued from page 19 Easter.” Marsh and Adelmann and others on the cathedral staff get to work. “It’s a beautiful day,” Marsh said.

And Monday? “You’re not going to find anybody in here on Monday,” Marsh said.

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Jennifer Ham, an Altar Guild member of the Cathedral of St. Philip in Buckhead, polishes the brass before the Holy Eucharist Rite II service on March 13. The service was the second of the day on the fifth Sunday of the Lenten season.

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A bonfire on the grounds of St. Philip, tended to by Boy Scouts from Troop 74, will enable clergy, choir members and worshipers to light candles and enter a dark church in early morning.

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MAR. 18 - MAR. 31, 2016

Community | 21

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HERE’S LOOKING AT YOU

The Chamblee Middle School Science Olympiad team took on 20 other middle schools in the Regional Science Olympiad Tournament on March 5 at Georgia State University, taking home the first-place trophy. The team now advances to the state tournament. Posing proudly with their trophy: Apoorva Agrawal, Carson Ankeny, Avaye Dawadi, William Emde, Kieran Ferguson, Sam Grant, James Hardy, Jay Krueger, Anish Kumar, Olivia Li, Victor Lim, Tiffany Oh, Vivien Orellana, Jai Ponkshe, Pooja Sehgal, Prateek Umashankar and Farley Wall.

Join us for the 18th Annual Montag Family Community Lecture Series

Members of The Westminster Schools’ girls’ squash team competed in the High School Nationals in Philadelphia, winning their bracket, becoming Division III National Champions.

The Atlanta Speech School is proud to host

Celebrating, front row, from left, Claire Bergman, Juliana Freschi, Pierson Klein, Lauren Clement. Second row, from left, Liza Cowan, assistant coach, Sarabeth Hoffman, Neeya Patel and Sarah Lawrence McGill. Back row, coach Rick Byrd.

Patricia Kuhl, Ph.D. Internationally renowned expert on early language acquisition, brain development and learning

Thursday, April 14 7:00 pm Atlanta Speech School Love Auditorium

MICHAEL ALEXANDER

St. Jude the Apostle School’s “GeoNexus” members, clockwise from left, Cathy McDonald, team mentor, Eleonora Straub, team facilitator, and seventh-graders Patrick McDonald, Peter Montesi and Diego Umana, recently placed first in the “Future City” state competition. The engineering competition challenged students to design a future city utilizing computer, math, science, design, writing and imaginative skills.

There is no charge to attend but space is limited. Reserve online at atlantaspeechschool.org/montag by April 12. Contact Pam Crockett at pcrockett@atlantaspeechschool.org for more information. This event is made possible by the support of the Montag family, our faithful friends and supporters of the Atlanta Speech School.

APRIL 3

SUNDAY OPEN H O U S E 10:30AM FULL DAY PRESCHOOL PROGRAM

18 months - Pre-K

New

being offered at Congregation B’nai Torah

Beginning August 2016

See our newly renovated school wing Participate in age-appropriate activities with your child Meet some of our teachers | Enjoy breakfast Win prizes (including free registration worth $250)!


22 | Out & About

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Party Trays

Mon – Sat 11am – 9pm Closed on Sunday

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FUNDRAISERS ATLANTA WOMEN’S 5K Saturday, March 26, 8 a.m. Join the Atlanta Track Club for a celebration of women and fitness at the Atlanta Women’s 5K. Event features “stroller division” start for moms, finisher’s medals, flowers at the finish line and a women’s-fit performance shirt. For those ages 8 and up. No pets, skates or bikes. Headphones discouraged. $35 through March 22; $45 on race day. “Back on My Feet” is the beneficiary. Chastain Park, 4469 Stella Dr., Atlanta, 30327. Register and find out more: atlantatrackclub.org.

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Beginning as low as $500 a month (financing available*) Lee M. Whitesides, D.M.D., M.M.Sc. Board Certified Oral & Maxillofacial Surgeon 4700 Chamblee Dunwoody Road Dunwoody, GA 30338 Tel: 770-393-8500 Northside Oral Surgery www.NorthsideOralSurgery.net

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Wednesday, March 30, 9 a.m. Help raise funds for breast cancer research at the first “Cure in Our Lifetime” Atlanta event at the Cherokee Town and Country Club. Spring breakfast tickets: $125. Geralyn Lucas, breast cancer survivor and author, is keynote speaker. 155 West Paces Ferry Rd., Atlanta, 30305. Purchase tickets and see additional details: atlantacure.org.

RHYTHM & BREWS Saturday, April 2, 1 p.m. Event features local bands and various local beers. Tickets for those aged 21 and older: $25 in advance; $35 at door. Includes entry, two brews and souvenir cup. Tickets for ages 13-20: $15 in advance; $25 day of. Children 12, free with paying adult. VIP passes available. Food for purchase onsite; free water provided. Blankets/chairs permitted. No smoking. No pets. Rain or shine. Buy tickets: freshtix.com/ events/rhythm-and-brews. Sandy Springs Society Entertainment Lawn, 6110 Bluestone Rd., Sandy Springs, 30328. Learn more: heritagesandysprings.org or call 404-851-9111 x1.

DUNWOODY

SANDY SPRINGS

ditory-Verbal Center, Inc., a nonprofit, offers free hearing screenings for those ages 3 and older. No appointment required. 1901 Century Boulevard, Suite 20, Atlanta, 30345. Call 404633-8911 or go to: avchears.org with questions.

BLOOD DRIVE Wednesday, March 30, 10 a.m. In response to an ongoing need for donations, Northside Hospital hosts a community blood drive. All donors receive a free T-shirt and free parking. Requirements: healthy, weigh at least 110 pounds and are 17 years or older. For more information or to schedule an appointment, contact Mandy Snavely at 770-667-4010 or via email: mandy.snavely@ northside.com. Doctors’ Centre, 980 Johnson Ferry Rd., NE, Atlanta, 30342.

FUN FOR ALL EGG HUNT Tuesday, March 22, 11 a.m.-12 p.m. Gather around as the Sandy Springs Branch Library holds its annual egg hunt in their reading garden behind the back parking lot. Children should bring a basket or bag to carry their goodies (candy included). Appropriate for ages 2-6. Free. Open to the public. 395 Mount Vernon Highway, Sandy Springs, 30328. Email: leah.germon@fultoncountyga.gov or call 404-303-6130 for details.

FIND THE EGGS! Saturday, March 26, 9:30 a.m. The city of Brookhaven’s Parks and Recreation Department hosts its annual egg hunt. Enjoy light snacks, face painting and a bounce house. Hunt begins at 10 a.m. Free and open to all. Bring your own basket. Blackburn Park, 3493 Ashford-Dunwoody Rd., Brookhaven, 30319. Call 404-637-0512 for more information.

DAFFODIL DASH

FIND MORE EGGS

Sunday, April 3, 9 a.m. Join others at the Daffodil Dash, a 1 mile and 5K run/walk in memory of children who perished in the Holocaust. Also supports children in Darfur, South Sudan and Rwanda. Starts and ends at Brook Run Park. Race followed by guest speakers. Rain or shine. $25; $12 for kids under 10 years old. $30 race day. Register online or learn more: daffodildash.org. 4770 N. Peachtree Rd., Dunwoody, 30338. Questions? Email: Andrea Videlefsky at worldwidedaffodilproject@gmail.com or call 1-855-665-4234.

Saturday, March 26, 10 a.m. Join others for a morning of bouncy houses, pony rides, a petting zoo, food and fun at Wieuca Road Baptist Church. Plus, find some eggs for your basket! 3626 Peachtree Rd., NE, Atlanta, 30326. Questions? Visit: wieuca.org or call 404-814-4460.

GET HEALTHY CHECK YOUR EARS Wednesday, March 23, 11 a.m.- 6 p.m. The Au-

RESCUE DOG OLYMPICS Saturday, March 26, 11 a.m.-4 p.m. These Olympics are a day of silly and competitive games for rescue dogs and their forever families! Check out interactive dog game stations, dog-related vendors, training sessions, food and a beer garden. Dog adoptions on site. All are welcome to enter Olympics. Free. Preregister and see additional details: homelesspets. com. Brook Run Park, 4770 N. Peachtree Rd., Dunwoody, 30338.


MAR. 18 - MAR. 31, 2016

Out & About | 23

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Hop to the Hyatt Regency Atlanta Perimeter at Villa Christina for our

campus, NC1100 Auditorium, 2101 Womack Rd., Dunwoody, 30338. Learn more: atlantasciencefestival.org/events.

Egg-straordinary Easter Brunch

‘HISTORY ALIVE’

PURIM CARNIVAL Sunday, March 27, 11:30 a.m.-1:30 p.m. Congregation Beth Shalom presents an “Out of this World” Purim carnival. Enjoy games, like the “Amazing Race” and “Knock Out Darth,” Queen Esther’s Karaoke Lounge, and other traditional carnival games and prizes! Wristbands: $10 before March 22; $15 after. Includes unlimited games. Lunch available for purchase: $4-$7. 5303 Winters Chapel Rd., Atlanta, 30360. Call 770-399-5300 or go to: bethshalomatlanta.org to find out more.

LET’S LEARN! ODD MATERIALS Monday, March 21, 3:30 p.m. Explore weird materials and learn the science behind their unusual properties. Create luminescent fountains, study superabsorbent diaper powder, or make silly putty and homemade bubble tea balls. Additional sessions at 4:30 and 5:30 p.m. Limited to 20 participants each. For kids 5-12 and families. Part of the Atlanta Science Festival. Free with advanced registration by calling the Chamblee Library at 770-936-1380 or visiting 4115 Clairmont Rd., Chamblee, 30341. Questions? Go to: atlantasciencefestival.org/events.

BEHIND ‘STAR WARS’

Tuesday, March 22, 7 p.m. The Dunwoody Preservation Trust presents speaker Tom Chrisman, who will discuss genealogy: how to get started, where to look and pitfalls to avoid. Free and open to the public. In the Williams Room, Dunwoody Branch Library, 5339 Chamblee-Dunwoody Rd., Dunwoody, 30338. Email: dunwoodypreservationtrust@gmail. com or call 770-668-0401 to find out more.

ADVANCE DIRECTIVES Thursday, March 24, 1-2 p.m. Do you have an Advance Directive for healthcare? Is it more than seven years old? Having a current AD is one of the most loving things you can do for your family. Learn more at this program presented by the Georgia Chapter of Compassion & Choices. Free. All are welcome. For adults 18 years and older. Dunwoody Branch Library, 5339 Chamblee-Dunwoody Rd., Dunwoody, 30338. Call 770-512-4640 with questions.

FINDING GRANTS Saturday, March 26, 4-5:30 p.m. Are you new to grantseeking? Discover what funders are looking for in nonprofits seeking grants and how to find potential funders. For adults. Registration required by visiting: grantspace. org or calling 404-880-0094. Sandy Springs Branch Library, 395 Mount Vernon Highway, Sandy Springs, 30328.

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Sunday, April 3, 2-5 p.m. SAT vs. ACT, which is right for you? What will impress colleges most? Find out at this at workshop. Light snacks and water provided. Advance registration required. For teens. Call 404-303-6130 or email: comments@co.fulton.ga.us to sign up or with questions. Sandy Springs Branch Library, 395 Mount Vernon Highway, Sandy Springs, 30328.

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Our elaborate Easter menu includes: breakfast favorites, prime rib, roasted leg of lamb, a fresh array of seafood and homemade pastas, as well as indulgent desserts,complimentary mimosas . . . and lots more!

SAT VS. ACT

Monday, March 21, 4-6 p.m. Join those of all ages for a discussion on the worlds of “Star Wars” and planets in our solar system and beyond. Enjoy video clips inspired by the movies and other sci-fi favorites. Attend in your favorite sci-fi attire! Free. For teens and adults. Part of the AtlanSUBMIT YOUR EVENT LISTING WITH US AT ta Science Festival. Georgia calendar@ReporterNewspapers.net State Dunwoody

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climber both in the U.S. and internationally.” said his coach, Claudiu Vidulescu. “I’m very proud to have played a small role in his climbing achievements so far and I wish him good luck in all his future endeavors.” Although climbing remains a

Luke is awaiting scholarship results for Southern Methodist University and Georgia Tech. He hopes to pursue a major in Electrical Engineering and to continue rock climbing. This article was reported and written by Sarah Kallis, a student at Holy Innocents’ Episcopal School.

Pet Sitters House Cleaners

Barbers

the sport. Luke Muehring startThis past summer, he ed rock climbing during competed in the World his freshman year in high Youth Rock Climbing Chamschool, after he was told one pionship in Arco, Italy, joinof the nation’s largest climbing more than 1,000 other ing gyms was only 20 minathletes from 51 countries. utes from his home. He and three other ath“When the ‘nation’s largletes qualified for the Unitest anything’ is 20 mined States team in Speed utes away from your home, Climbing, where competiyou’ve got to check it out,” tors try to get to the top of a he said. standardized international Although he didn’t make route as quickly as possible. it to the top of the 60-foot Luke Muehring Luke’s favorite part wall on his first try, Luke about the two-week-long event was the was hooked on climbing. opportunity to interact with climbers “Sports like Ping-Pong and football, from different countries. Contestants exyou’re pitted against an opponent,” he said. changed jerseys, he said, and tried to com“In rock climbing, the only person who is municate despite speaking different landetermining your performance is you.” guages. Luke speaks German and Chinese, Four years after his introduction to so he was able to practice his language climbing, Luke has ascended to the top of

Accountants

North Springs Charter High, senior

big part of Luke’s life - he trains five days a week for three hours at a time - he has other passions, including electrical engineering. Luke, one of North Springs’ Top Ten scholars this year and the school’s STAR student, means he posted the highest SAT score at North Springs, and excels in science and math courses. Luke’s interest for electronics started when the charger port for his laptop broke. “To replace this one simple part…you had to completely disassemble the computer. So I got to see how each component works for each other, and how they relate,” he said. “Recently, I built my own computer. I looked up on line how to do it. It’s like really expensive Legos,” he said.

Caregivers

Luke Muehring

skills by talking with other athletes. Now, with the competition done, he stays in touch with some of the other competitors via Instagram and Snapchat. Luke also uses his climbing skills to help others through Catalyst Sports, a nonprofit that helps children and adults with physical or mental disabilities learn to rock climb for recreation or rehabilitation. Luke started volunteering after he saw events at the gym where he practices climbing. “His love for the sport, discipline level and commitment has shaped him to be a great athlete and a very successful youth

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Reporter Classifieds SERVICES AVAILABLE

CLEANING SERVICES

HELP WANTED

Tranquil Waters Lawn Care – Pressure washing, flower beds, trimming, tree/ shrubs installation, hauling of debris, etc. Free estimates. Discounts for Seniors & Veterans. No contracts needed. Call Mike 678-662-0767 or Andrew 678-672-8552.

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Driveways & Walkways – Replaced or repaired. Masonry, grading, foundations repaired, waterproofing and retaining walls. Call Joe Sullivan 770-616-0576.

Detail Cleaning Services – Houses, apartments, offices and more. Affordable prices with excellent references. I will beat any advertised price – call 770-837-5711.

Adult person willing to work days, nights and weekends. Full time position with Jacobs Engineering as maintenance tech/ parks attendant for Sandy Springs Rec Dept. salary 15.00 per hr. and full benefits. Mail or email resume to City of Sandy Springs Recreation & Parks Department at: 7840 Roswell Road, Bldg 500, Sandy Springs, GA 30350 or ryoung@sandyspringsga.gov

Property Management and Maintenance Services – any type of property. Good record keeping, 24 yrs experience and References available. Email: Alphaco@ comcast.net or call 770-804-9931.

House Cleaning Services – Fast & Affordable. Call Elle at 404-903-2913. I will do laundry also – ask for rates.

CEMETERY PLOTS Arlington Memorial Park – Four spaces, Two vaults, Two markers. Oak Hill section - $12,000 OR Best Offer. Current retail value - $28,000. Call Bob at 770-4577124.

Drivers Wanted Senior Services North Fulton, a non-profit organization, has an opportunity for drivers in their transportation voucher program. If you live in the Sandy Springs or Roswell area of north Fulton, would like to earn some extra money, set your own hours, like to drive, have a car, and like to be of service to seniors, please contact Mobility Manager at

(770) 993-1906 ext. 242


MAR. 18 - MAR. 31, 2016

Classifieds | 29

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To Adver�ise, call 404-917-2200 ext 110

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30 | Public Safety

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Police Blotter / Sandy Springs From police reports dated March 4 through March 11 The following information was provided by Capt. Steve Rose of the Sandy Springs Police Department from its records and is presumed to be accurate.

R O B B E RY 8100 block of Colquitt Road – Cops

Experience matters. Let us show you why. By any measure, 28 years of experience in senior living is a lot. And through the years, we’ve helped many people find a lifestyle perfectly suited to them. Our secret? We listen. And we’ve found that every person’s need or desire to move is incredibly unique. We’ve created equally unique places to live with great social opportunities, fine dining, accredited care services, and more. All with you in mind. Come see how good it feels to have experience on your side. Please call The Piedmont today to schedule your complimentary lunch and tour.

You’re Invited to our Hidden Treasures Antique Appraisal Event! Thursday, March 31st • 1:00-3:00pm Hear expert insights from Certified Appraiser Selma Paul. Call 404.381.1743 to RSVP and bring a hand-carried antique to this fun and fascinating event at The Piedmont at Buckhead.

were called to an apartment complex on March 8, just before 11 p.m., on a robbery call. They found a man who had been injured and was bleeding from his head. The man said he was trying to unlock his door to his apartment when he was approached by a young gun-toting male demanding the keys to his car. The victim refused and was hit in the head by the suspect’s gun. The suspect then fled. A witness said he saw a young male

running from that location toward Northridge Road. The officer notified the other cars near the area of the attacker’s description. Officers located a suspect at Northridge and Dunwoody Place. After a brief chase on foot, he was captured. He was charged with aggravated assault, robbery, obstruction and possession of a firearm during the commission of a felony. The victim was treated at North Fulton Hospital for a laceration to the back of his head.

B U R G L A RY 6000 block of Riverside Drive – Some-

one forced entry into a home under renovation and took a microwave. This occurred sometime between March 5 and March 6.

1400 block of

Summit Springs Drive – On March 6, a resident said that during the night someone entered her home while she was sleeping and took her bedroom dresser TV. She suspects her ex-boyfriend.

Captain STEVE ROSE, SSPD srose@sandyspringsga.gov

Unoccupied

homes in the 200 block of Mount Vernon Highway were burglariezed between March 7 and March 8. A Viking refrigerator was taken. 100 block of Landsdowne Drive – On

March 8, a resident said sometime during the day someone entered his home and took his iPhone charger and $75 in gift cards given to him. He said that someone had come into the home on several occasions and he suspects his nephew.

THEFTS 5500 block of New Northside Drive –

On March 4, police were called to the location just after 2 a.m. and spoke to a man who said he was at a gas station. He left his car running but locked it while he was in the store. He then saw a man attempting to pry the door open. The suspect aborted the attempt and fled toward I-285 in a newer model Chevy Camaro.

SANDY SPRINGS NOTICE OF VARIANCE Petition Number:

V16-0013

Petitioner:

Arris Realty Partners, LLC

Location:

0, 5844, 5840, 5834, 5830 Roswell Road

Request:

Primary Variances (6): 1. Variance from Sec. 12.B.8.D.4a to waive front entry requirement on public ROW for building on Cliftwood Way; 2. Variance from Sec. 12.B.8.D.4a to waive front entry requirement on public ROW for building on Roswell Road;

I n de p e n de n t & A s s i s t e d L i v i ng

3. Variance from Sec. 12.B.8.F.2c to waive transparency requirement on public ROW (Cliftwood Way);

650 Phipps Boulevard NE • Atlanta, GA www.ThePiedmontatBuckhead.com • 404.381.1743

4. Variance from Sec.12.B.8.F.2b.V to increase allowable building length from 200’ to 252’ for rear building; 5. Variance from Sec. 12.B.8.E.2 to reduce the minimum required building height from 25’ to 16’8” for the northernmost building; 6. Variance from Section 12.B.8.E to reduce the minimum required building height from 25’ to 20’ for the southernmost building. Public Hearings:

Board of Appeals April 14, 2016 at 6:00 p.m.

Location:

Sandy Springs City Hall Morgan Falls Office Park 7840 Roswell Road, Building 500 Sandy Springs, Georgia 30350 770-730-5600 SS


MAR. 18 - MAR. 31, 2016

Public Safety | 31

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1100 block of Perimeter Center West

– On March 5, a construction project manager reported that he was informed by employees that other employees have been committing thefts over the past couple of months, primarily stealing electrical equipment amounting to $15,000. A man on Claridge Drive said that on

March 5 he met a woman at a bar and restaurant at Phipps Plaza and they returned to his home to drop his car off and then take an Uber to a club. He came home and had a beer. The next thing that he remembers is that he awoke the following day on his couch. His watch, bracelet, house keys and keys to his car were missing. The car was not taken. He said the woman had an indented tooth, a tattoo on her back, and called herself “Olivia.” He said the staff at the bar knew her as “Alex.” He believes he was drugged. 1100 block of

Mount Vernon Highway – On March 6, a 45-year-old man reported that during his workout at a gym, someone removed a combination lock and took his backpack that contained several items.

6600 block of Roswell Road – On

March 6, a 55-year-old woman reported that after shopping at a grocery store, she loaded her items into the car and then returned the cart to the cart-return area. She returned to her car only to find her purse was gone. 6100 block of Peachtree Dunwoody

Road – On March 7, a hotel employee said someone took her backpack from behind the front desk of the hotel. Missing are personal items and $1,200 cash. 5400 block of Meridian Mark Road –

taling $97. A woman reported that she and her

boyfriend were at a hotel on Hammond Drive when he snatched her phone and began looking at her contacts, then refused to return it. They fought over it but he then left with the phone.

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On March 8, at a discount department

store in the 5500 block of Roswell Road, a man took several items and paid for some, but not all. Two items he didn’t pay for were an Apple Air Port valued at $199 and a $429 breast pump. On March 10 on Adair Lane, a 25-year-

old woman said she placed her clothes in the laundry room of her apartment complex. She returned 30 minutes later and found that all of her underwear was gone. She said this happened once before. She noticed a man sitting in a Chevy Impala in the parking lot during that time. The victim’s friend said she also had underwear stolen from that room before. She said the same car was there prior to her theft as well.

OT H E R A 50-year-old man reported that he

owns a home in Marietta that he leases. He notified the tenant that the lease was up and emailed him if he wanted to renew. The man said he did initially, but did not contact the owner afterward. The owner assumed he did not want to renew. The owner went about the business of showing the home to new prospects, angering the current resident who has now made threats to shoot anyone coming over—specifically with a scoped rifle. An officer was called to meet with a

woman who said that her 12-year-old daughter was being disrespectful to her and had been missing school. She confronted her daughter, who in turn said she would have her friend kill her mother, if she wished.

On March 7, an employee said she left her purse and laptop on her office desk and went to a meeting. Upon return, the items were gone. Later someone used her credit card at the nearby READ MORE OF THE POLICE BLOTTER ONLINE AT Medical station MARTA stop nine times to-

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442 Meadow Watch Lane - $1,050,000 Debbie Sonenshine 404-250-5311 John Willis home w/neutral decor. Study w/French doors, great rm w/fireplace & coffered ceiling open to keeping rm w/stone fireplace & wooden vaulted ceiling. High-end kit w/Double Wolf ovens, 6 burner gas cooktop & huge hidden walk-in pantry. Mudroom withBeach lockers.| 5/2 Stunning master w/sitting room, FP, & Sunny Isles | $12,000,000 room-size closet. terrace Copy to go here. Finished Copy to go here. level. CopySpeakers here. Copythroughout. to go here.

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1240 Tynecastle Way $999,900 Judy Soden 678-938-8724 Karyn Feinbeg 404-309-9018

Lake house in the city, VACATION everyday! Gorgeous house overlooking 25 acre, spring-fed, Lake Northridge. Bill Harrison designed, built with| $12,000,000 quality & attention to detail. Move-in Sunny Islescustom Beach | 5/2 ready,tonewer construction, large, open floor plan. Priced $400,000 Copy go here. Copy to go here. Copy here. Copy to go here. recent Rare opportunity to purchase Copybelow to gotwo here. Copyappraisals. here. Copy to go here. Copy to go here. such a beautiful home with a spectacular setting so close in! Barbara Ackerman 866.600.6008 1234 Main Street Avenue Search 0000000 on CBHomes.com

7040 Wycombe Road - $624,900 Michelle Irastorza 678-522-4448 Move in ready brick traditional w/high end finishes & full finished basement on flat 1/2 acre lot. Fantastic location minutes| 5/2 to major Highways/Marta/Perimeter Sunny Isles- Beach | $12,000,000 Mall. toCopy new Abernathy Greenway Park,totop Copy to Close go here. to go here. Copy here. Copy gorated here. tennis & new Mercedes-Benz HQ. Established Copy to gofacility here. Copy here. Copy to go here. Copy to go here. neighborhood w/optional swim tennis membership. Barbara Ackerman 866.600.6008 1234 Main Street Avenue Search 0000000 on CBHomes.com

10301 Papillon Trace - $625,000 Cindy Wallace 678-488-7771 Private .97 acre lot. Eat-in kit, vaulted fireside great rm w/exposed wood beams. Gorgeous landscaping & gunite pool w/hot tub. Main floor master w/ fireplace, spa bath & his/hers walk-in closets. Sep Sunny Isles Beach | 5/2 | $12,000,000 banquet rm. Finished terrace Copystudy to go&here. Copysize to godining here. Copy here. Copy to go here. hdwd trimhere. details & to plantation Copylvl, to go here.flrs, Copy Copy go here. shutters. Copy to go here. Barbara Ackerman 866.600.6008 1234 Main Street Avenue Search 0000000 on CBHomes.com

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SANDY SPRINGS NOTICE OF VARIANCE PETITION

345 Saddlebrook Drive - $439,000 Jessica Peltier 704-953-8075 Karen Niese Tompkins 404-273-6607

4 sided brick home w/ brand new roof 07/2015! New carpet in all

3625 Davidson Farm Drive - $425,000 Sandra Holmes 404-229-3009 Master on main w/luxurious bath, dual sink vanity, soaking tub, tiled shower stall & separate water closet. Formal DR. 2-story Sunny Isles Beach | 5/2 | $12,000,000 great rm w/stone fireplace. Chef’s kit w/granite counters, Copy to go here. Copy to go here. Copy here. Copy to go here. double ovens, stainless appliances, breakfast area & fireside Copy to go here. Copy here. Copy to go here. Copy to go here. keeping rm. Upper lvl has bonus rm & 3 bdrms - 1 w/en-suite Barbara Ackerman 866.600.6008 ba & 2 sharing a ba w/separate vanities. Fenced yard. 1234 Main Street Avenue

Petition Number:

V16-0020

Petitioner:

Alan Clark

Location:

5260 West Kingston Court

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Request:

Two (2) Variances from Development Regulation 109-225: Request to encroach into 50’ stream buffer and 75’ impervious surface setback for addition to existing single family residence and construction of single car garage; Request to bring nonconforming structure encroaching in 25’ and 50’ stream buffers and 75’ impervious surface setback into conformity

Sandy Springs 5252 Roswell Road, Suite 202 | Atlanta, GA 30342 Sandy Springs 404.252.4908

Public Hearings:

Board of Appeals April 14, 2016 at 6:00 p.m.

Location:

Sandy Springs City Hall Morgan Falls Office Park 7840 Roswell Road, Building 500 Sandy Springs, Georgia 30350 770-730-5600

SS

Search 0000000 on CBHomes.com

5252 Roswell Road, Suite 202 | Atlanta, GA 30342 404.252.4908

The property information herein is derived from various sources that may include, but not be limited to, county records and the Multiple Listing Service and it may include approximations. Although the information is believed to be accurate, it is not warranted and you should not rely upon it without personal verification. Real estate agents affiliated with Coldwell Banker Residential Brokerage are independent contractor agents and are not employees of the Company. ©2015 Coldwell Banker Real Estate LLC. All Rights Reserved. Coldwell Banker Real Estate LLC fully supports the principles of the Fair Housing Act and the Equal Opportunity Act. Operated by a subsidiary of NRT LLC. Coldwell Banker, the Coldwell Banker logo, Coldwell Banker Previews International and the Previews logo are registered and unregistered service marks owned by Coldwell Banker Real Estate LLC. 11146_ATL_08/15

Administered American Home Shield Administered by by American Home Shield


32 |

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Among the fascinating people who

live and work at Canterbury Court:

T.J. & Lois

ANDERSON Residents since 2012 Composer • Conductor Orchestrator • Professor Volunteer • School Librarian Book Reviewer

We appreciate spirited discussions and connecting with SS


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