Inside Chosen one Development partner for city center selected COMMUNITY 2-3
A benefit?
Sandy Springs Reporter
PERIMETER BU S
www.ReporterNewspapers.net
pages 9-
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JUNE 27 — JULY 10, 2014 • VOL. 8 — NO. 13
Fish for the frying pan
Residents have say on medicinal marijuana COMMENTARY 8
Blast off Find out where to celebrate Fourth of July OUT & ABOUT 18
Time to reflect Fasting during Ramadan one of ‘Five Pillars of Islam’ FAITH 21
Reporter Newspapers Small Business of the Year, 2013
Lenox Brotherton, 6, tries his luck at catching a “big one” at Island Ford along the Chattahoochee River during a Kids’ Fishing Day event on June 21. Youngsters used poles made of river cane to snag bluegill, catfish or bass. More photos on page 27.
PHIL MOSIER
Study: Clippings, dog waste pollute streams BY ANN MARIE QUILL
annmariequill@reporternewspapers.net
SANDY SPRINGS/PERIMETER CHAMBER OF COMMERCE
Yard clippings and dog waste are some of the reasons two streams in Sandy Springs are polluted, says a Kennesaw State University class, whose members presented findings of a six-week summer study to the community on June 24. The study marked the fourth year the class has teamed with the Watershed Alliance of Sandy Springs to conduct field studies monitoring the health of Long Island and Marsh creeks. “It’s a service for the community and an educational experience for [the class],” said Dick Farmer of the Watershed Alliance.
‘Top-end’ traffic construction: Snarl or salvation? p. 22
SEE KSU STUDY, PAGE 7
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COMMUNITY
Carter/Selig picked as master developer for city center BY ANN MARIE QUILL
annmariequill@reporternewspapers.net
Roswell Road’s transformation is one step closer with the selection of a master developer for Sandy Springs’ city center, the project that is meant to transform the corridor into a walkable downtown with green space, mixed-use development, and a civic and performing arts center. Sandy Springs City Council on June 17 unanimously approved entering into a 90-day negotiation period with Carter/ Selig Enterprises to become its development partner in Phase I implementation of the center’s master plan, which includes an area north of Hammond Drive and west of Roswell Road. The master developer will be responsible for developing and managing the retail, private office and residential component of the SPECIAL project, including planning, deCarter/Selig Enterprises will bring sign, financing, permitting, conto life Phase 1 of the city’s master struction, sales and leasing, and plan, which includes an area north of ongoing management. Hammond Drive and west of Roswell “This is a process that we Road. To see a larger version of this started approximately nine map, go to ReporterNewspapers.net. months ago to identify a partner for the implementation of our city center master plan,” said City volve public workshops and the counManager John McDonough at the cil’s approval. council meeting. Carter/Selig was unanimously choCarter/Selig was among four fisen by an evaluation committee connalists chosen following a request for sisting of McDonough, other staff, qualifications issued by the city in Sepand developers. Mayor Rusty Paul was tember, and was chosen after a request an advisor to the committee. for proposals was issued to the final“We had some realy good ideas and ists. The team consists of the Carter proposals that were put on the table,” real estate firm and Selig Enterprises, Paul said. “It was a very difficult deboth Atlanta-area veterans in the decision, but in the end, Carter/Selig velopment industry. clearly was the correct choice.” “Carter/Selig is one of the oldHe said that the negotiation period est and most successful of all Atlantais an interim step toward final approvbased real estate developers and ownal, and once there is a letter of intent ers,” McDonough said. “We believe and program and development agreethey also demonstrated flexibility in ments, the city will be able to move their approach to uses and density on forward on city center plans. this site.” He said that all decisions such as After the 90-day period, terms of how the site will be developed and the negotiation will be brought back what it will look like will be fully aired to the council for approval. in public. “We don’t know ultimately as we sit “The public is going to have every here tonight what the final developopportunity to provide feedback in ment agreement will look like,” Mcthis, because this is the most imporDonough said, explaining that final tant project the city has ever undertakdetails will be hammered out during en in its young history,” Paul said. “It’s the 90-day period, and that any potenone of the reasons why we wanted to tial changes to the master plan will inbecome a city.”
Sandy Springs Government Calendar The Sandy Springs City Council usually meets the first and the third Tuesday of each month at 6 p.m. at City Hall, which is located at 7840 Roswell Road, Building 500 For the most up to date meeting schedule, visit http://www.sandyspringsga.org/Calendars/City-Calendar
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JUNE 27 – JULY 10, 2014 | www.ReporterNewspapers.net
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Development team claims longtime local roots BY ANN MARIE QUILL
annmariequill@reporternewspapers.net
When Sandy Springs City Council made its choice for a master developer for its city center project, the city opted for a team of veteran real estate developers. The choice – made unanimously by an evaluation committee, according to the mayor – was Carter/Selig, a partnership of two Atlanta-area development firms that now has entered into a 90-day negotiation period with the city to hash out final details of the deal. Carter will head up the residential aspect of the mixed-use development, while Selig Enterprises will lead the retail component. Selig Enterprises’ roots in Atlanta can be traced as far back to 1918, though it formally became Selig Enterprises in 1968. The company’s portfolio today contains more than 10 million square feet of properties in the Southeast. Among its properties are AAA Parking, Ansley Mall, Brookwood Place on Peachtree, Avondale Crossing and Buckhead Commons. “Over the course of this project, we look forward to working with the Sandy Springs community to create a unique, mixed-use destination and community asset which attracts residents and visitors to the development for a variety of activities,” said Scott Selig, vice president of acquisitions and development with Selig
Enterprises. “A unique and sustainable retail experience will be core to that mission.” Selig Enterprises’ president and chairman of the board, Steve Selig, is regarded as a pillar of the community, serving on the boards of the Atlanta Housing Authority, Woodruff Arts Center and the Carter Center, among others. Carter, headquartered in Atlanta, boasts five decades of experience in real estate. Its projects include Lindbergh City Center and Columbus Commons in Ohio, an example of a public-private partnership. “Over the past 12 months, Sandy Springs has spent significant effort conceptualizing a vision for its City Center project,” said Jerome Hagley, executive vice president of Carter. “The Carter/ Selig team looks forward to partnering with the city of Sandy Springs in a collaborative effort to fine-tune the overall development program, while addressing both civic and private components.” John Jokerst, senior vice president of development with Carter and a Sandy Springs resident, was on hand when the council voted to approve the team. “I’m a proud resident of Sandy Springs, and very excited about this project,” said Jokerst.
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Future Land Use: Continuation of corporate campuses and major commercial/retail, with some mixed-use development and general densification of uses.
adP Plaza at WindWaRd ShoPPing CenteR
ARD WINDW
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Vacant/Underutilized Land: 148 Acres (29% of total land area)
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Projected 2040 Population: 1,756 Projected 2040 Employment: 2,137
RTH
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opportunities: • Vacant land available for development • Opportunities for higher density and a greater variety of commercial uses
oLd miLton
Existing Land Use/Zoning: Office/institutional campuses, undeveloped land, and some commercial uses. Scarce residential uses.
(1/2 Mile)
PRoSPeCt PaRk develoPMent Site
(light Rail or Bus Rapid Transit Only)
Future Land Use: Prospect Park (86-acre) mixed-use development under construction in NW. Additional institutional and office campuses (Gwinnett Tech future campus, additional medical offices), with some medium-density residential developing in Ne area.
WEBB BRIDGE RD.
alPhaRetta MediCal CaMPuS
Vacant/Underutilized Land: 250 Acres (49% of total land area) Projected 2040 Population: 2,184 Projected 2040 Employment: 4,027
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Existing Land Use/Zoning: Technology and business park/campus setting east of 400 with large undeveloped areas. The west side is comprised of hotels, big-box retail, and the Hewlett-Packard campus.
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opportunities: • existing/future development not likely to support heavy rail in near term - light rail or BRT only. • Significant amount of developable (open) land.
north Point
Existing Land Use/Zoning: South of 400 is comprised of North Point Mall and other auto-oriented commercial uses. North of 400 is primarily corporate/institutional campuses and open/ undeveloped areas.
C o M M u n i t y S tat i o n
(1/2 Mile)
devRy univeRSity alPhaRetta honda
ES BRIDG E RD.
noRth Point Mall
Projected 2040 Population: 1,738 Projected 2040 Employment : 3,911 opportunities: • improve overall connectivity, develop TOD. • Mixed-use village between mall & encore Pkwy.
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• Circulator bus loop between North Point & Mansell.
n e i g h b o R h o o d S tat i o n
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Existing Land Use/Zoning: Auto-oriented commercial and business parks. Mansell Crossing mall in Ne quadrant; Big Creek Greenway (natural open space) in Se quad.
(1/2 Mile)
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Future Land Use: Mixed-use development, corporate office campuses, continued greenway conservation, institutional uses.
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alPhaRetta Skate CenteR
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JUNE 27 – JULY 10, 2014 | www.ReporterNewspapers.net
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Plaza at RoSWell ShoPPing CtR. AMA
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Future Land Use: Mixed-use development, commercial, corporate office campuses, and some light industrial uses. Vacant/Underutilized Land: 177 Acres (35% of total land area)
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opportunities: • Open land and surface parking provide development opportunities. • With improved connectivity, Mansell-North Point cluster is the corridor’s best opportunity for future Transit Oriented Development (TOD).
Existing Land Use/Zoning: Auto-oriented commercial uses along Holcomb Bridge Rd. Townhomes and multi-family residential prevalent west of 400. Kimberly-Clark headquarters occupies most of the Ne quadrant and older shopping center soccupy much of the Se quadrant. Future Land Use: Mixed-use redevelopment of underutilized commercial centers. Additional higher-density residential and professional office uses. Vacant/Underutilized Land: 107 Acres (21% of total land area) Projected 2040 Population: 2,927 Projected 2040 Employment: 2,176 opportunities: • Redevelopment of underutilized shopping centers. • Mid-rise residential node near Kimberly-Clark.
Existing Land Use/Zoning: low-density residential uses east of 400 with some institutional and office uses. Offices, auto-oriented commercial & high-density residential west of 400. Future Land Use: east of 400 to remain low-density residential with institutional uses. West of 400, mixed-use is planned for Northridge/SR-9, with surrounding areas developing mid-high density residential. Vacant/Underutilized Land: 66 Acres (13% of total land area)
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MARTA’s Connect 400 Project proposes new stations at Northridge Road, Holcomb Bridge Road, Mansell Road, North Point Mall, Old Milton Parkway and Windward Parkway. There has been much discussion on the path these new lines would take. Residents would like to see the rail line built on the west side of Ga. 400, rather than the east side, lessening the impact on existing schools and neighborhoods. MARTA plans a series of public input meetings to discuss the extension. See a larger version of this map online at ReporterNewspapers.net.
Projected 2040 Population: 2,766 Projected 2040 Employment: 2,736
MARTA
opportunities: • limited changes will occur east of 400. • Mixed-use node at Northridge/State Route 9 could help provide transit-supportive density.
1/2 mile radius 10-minute Walk Shed Proposed transit alternative
GA 400 Corridor Alternatives Analysis
Residents: MARTA rail extension must go west of Ga. 400 BY JENNA GOFF Sandy Springs residents had a simple message for MARTA when discussing how best to extend the transit agency’s trains to the north: Go west of Ga. 400. “If the expansion were to proceed on the east side of the highway from the North Springs station, it would potentially impact two elementary schools [Woodland Forest and Dunwoody Springs Charter] and many neighborhoods that exist already,” Chip Swearngan, president of the Somerset Homeowners Association in Sandy Springs, told MARTA officials during a meeting with homeowners June 12. Other residents said a past agreement between MARTA and the community promised MARTA would expand solely on the west side. More commercial development exists on that side of the highway, and fewer neighborhoods would be affected. “That agreement is still there, but we must consider all options,” said Don Williams, senior director of transit system planning at MARTA. “Nothing is etched in stone. We want to find the best suitable option.” MARTA officials are examining ways to provide future mass transit to Fulton County residents who live north of the river. The project is expected to take 10 to 15 years. Janide Sidifall, project manager for MARTA, said that because of changes in the area over the years, the agency “had to start back at zero in 2011.” MARTA is examining three options: bus rapid transit, light rail and extending the current heavy rail line north from Sandy Springs. The agency is considering adding stations at Northridge Road, Holcomb Bridge Road, Mansell Road, North Point Mall, Old Milton Parkway and
Windward Parkway. “If we do not have strong community support, we will not do the project. It won’t be funded,” Williams said. Preliminary estimates show the bus option is expected to cost about $460 million, compared to $1.8 billion for light rail and $1.6 billion for heavy rail, Sidifall said. The heavy rail option is cheaper than light rail, she said, because it extends the current line. The reason MARTA is looking at a rail line east of Ga. 400 is simply the cost. Sidifall said each crossing of Ga. 400 is projected to add “a few hundred thousand dollars” to the cost of the project. If the train crosses to the west side of Ga. 400, it will at some point have to return to the east side, she said. Sandy Springs and Dunwoody city officials have publicly expressed support for building the rail on the west side of the Ga. 400 highway, saying building on the east side would interfere with neighborhoods. MARTA is holding a series of public discussions on plans to extend its trains north to Alpharetta. The trains now stop at the North Springs station. MARTA’s plans call for a new station at Northridge Road. MARTA officials met with residents of the Somerset Homeowners Association and the Northridge Community Association on June 12. Three more community meetings will be held in the near future to discuss MARTA’s Connect 400 Project. The first will be held on July 8 from 6:30 to 8 p.m. at the Johns Creek Environmental Center; the next will be on July 10 from 6:30 to 8 p.m. at the GSU Alpharetta Center; the last will be on July 17 from 6:30 to 8 p.m. at the Hampton Inn Atlanta/Perimeter.
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JUNE 27 – JULY 10, 2014 | 5
COMMUNITY Performing & Visual Arts Children’s Camp: Ages 5-10 “Journey to the Land of Make Believe” DATES
CAMP SESSION TITLE AND DESCRIPTION
WEEK 6 6/30 - 7/ 3
Neverland: Refuse to grow up! Instead, join Peter Pan, Tinker Bell and the Lost Boys as they set off on an adventure to remember. (4 Day Camp)
WEEK 7 7/7 - 7/11
Dinosaurs of Bedrock: Yabba Dabba Doo! Visit this prehistoric town where dinosaurs coexist with modernized cave people.
WEEK 8 7/14 - 7/18 WEEK 9 7/21 - 7/25
Deep Sea Adventure: Dive into magical ocean adventures with SpongeBob, Nemo and friends. The Land of Oz: Join Dorothy, the Scarecrow, Tin Man and the Cowardly Lion as they follow the yellow brick road into the Emerald City.
WEEK 10 7/ 28 - 8/1
Medieval Times: Travel to the Middle Ages with kings, lords, ladies and knights.
WEEK 11 8/4 - 8/8
Hogwarts: Gather at platform 9 3/4 to catch the Hogwarts Express for an unforgettable adventure filled with magic.
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When you bank at the BoSS... Performing & Visual Arts Children’s Camp: Ages 5-10 YOU are the Boss! “Journey to the Land of Make Believe” DATES
CAMP SESSION TITLE AND DESCRIPTION
WEEK 6 6/30 - 7/ 3
Neverland: Refuse to grow up! Instead, join Peter Pan, Tinker Bell and the Lost Boys as they set off on an adventure to remember. (4 Day Camp)
WEEK 7 7/7 - 7/11
Dinosaurs of Bedrock: Yabba Dabba Doo! Visit this prehistoric town where dinosaurs coexist with modernized cave people.
WEEK 8 7/14 - 7/18
Deep Sea Adventure: Dive into magical ocean adventures with SpongeBob, Nemo and friends. The Land of Oz: Join Dorothy, the Scarecrow, Tin Man and the Cowardly Lion as they follow the yellow brick road into the Emerald City.
WEEK 9 7/21 - 7/25 WEEK 10 7/ 28 - 8/1 WEEK 11
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for 11 to 18 months (you select the term) with our
{Grand Opening CD Special } • Deposit funds at any time with as little as $1,000 • Bump up your rate once during the original term3 • Withdraw funds once during the term with no penalty4 6000 Sandy Springs Circle Sandy Springs, GA 30328 404-334-8600 www.BankOfSandySprings.com A relationship is defined as having additional products (commercial or consumer) at Bank of Sandy Springs (BoSS). You may have an existing relationship and open your CD with new money or establish a relationship by opening an additional account, loan or other product with BoSS. Not available on transfers from existing BoSS or Midtown Bank accounts. 2If you do not currently have a relationship with BoSS and choose not to add additional accounts or products, you will receive 0.90% APY. The promotional Annual Percentage Yield (APY) and “Bump-Up” feature are available on BoSS’s Grand Opening Certificate of Deposit as of 6/9/14. Advertised rate and APY are offered at the bank’s discretion and are subject to change at any time. Rate applies to the initial term only. 3“Bump-Up” option is based on the published rate for the standard 12-month Certificate of Deposit and can be exercised by contacting BoSS. The new rate will not be applied retroactively. If rates remain the same or decreases, the initial rate will remain in effect through the term of the CD. Interest may remain in the CD, be paid by check or transferred to another BoSS account. 4Penalty free withdrawal option can be exercised after the account is open for 30 days. A balance of $1,000 must be maintained. Early withdrawal penalty after the 1 allowable penalty free withdrawal, is 6 months of interest; fees may reduce earnings. The CD is automatically renewed into a 12-month standard CD at maturity unless we receive contrary instructions from you. Grand Opening CD available until 8/31/2014. Important Information About Deposit Insurance Coverage: Midtown Bank and Bank of Sandy Springs are the same FDIC-insured institution. Deposits held under Midtown Bank or the trade name Bank of Sandy Springs are not separately insured but are combined to determine whether a depositor has exceeded basic federal deposit insurance limits. 1
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JUNE 27 – JULY 10, 2014 | www.ReporterNewspapers.net
City holds millage rate hearings The city of Sandy Springs will hold its first public hearing on next year’s millage rate on Tuesday, July 15, at 6 p.m. at City Hall Council Chambers, 7840 Roswell Road. The budget tentatively adopted by the Sandy Springs mayor and council requires a millage rate higher than the rollback millage rate. Each year, the board of tax assessors is required to review the assessed value for property tax purposes of taxable property in the county. When trends of prices on properties that have recently sold in the county indicate there has been an increase in the fair market value of any specific property, the board of tax assessors is required by law to re-determine the value of such property and adjust the assessment. This is called a reassessment. There are two types of value increases made to a county tax digest: increases due to inflation and increases due to new or improved properties. When the total digest of taxable property is prepared, Georgia law requires that a rollback millage rate must be computed that will produce the same total revenue on the current year’s digest that last year’s millage rate would have produced had no reassessments occurred. The city’s millage rate of 4.731 is set in the city charter and has not changed since incorporation. However, due to the increase in property values, the millage rate for FY15 reflects as 1.07 percent higher than the rollback millage rate computed by the Fulton County Tax Assessors Office. Based on Georgia law, three public hearings will be held prior to the City Council finalizing the budget and setting a final millage rate. The two additional required public hearings will be held on Aug. 5 at 7:30 a.m. and 6 p.m. The council adopted a $90 million general fund budget at its June 17 council meeting.
Rural/Metro contract renewed Rural/Metro Ambulance will continue to provide emergency medical services (EMS) within the city of Sandy Springs. During its June 17 meeting, the city council approved a five-year contract extension with EMS Ventures, Inc., Rural/Metro’s parent company. Rural/Metro has been the city’s ambulance provider since incorporation in 2005. “We are talking about a service in which every minute can be the difference between life and death. They not only meet the response times, but also many times beat them. Rural/Metro has done a phenomenal job of saving lives in Sandy Springs,” said Mayor Rusty Paul in a press release. Under the agreement, Rural/Metro must dedicate three full-time, 24-hour ambulances, and two ambulances in the city for 12 hours a day during peak
BR I EF S
hours. Rural/Metro also must meet an eight-minute response time on all emergency calls, and a 15-minute response time on all non-emergency calls 90 percent of the time. In 2013, Rural/Metro responded to 9,415 calls for emergency medical service with an average six minutes and 49 seconds response time. In approving the contract, City Council elected to decrease the city’s annual subsidy for service. The city currently pays $450,000 in annual added support. Under the new agreement, the city will pay Rural/Metro $120,000 annually to ensure the current dedication of staffing, equipment and response time. Patients who use the EMS services will see an increase in fees for those services; however, the cost for EMS care remains below similar services among other North Fulton municipalities.
Fulton schedules hearings on tax increase Fulton County will hold three public hearings on a proposed 17 percent property tax increase before voting on July 16. Commissioners voted 5-2 to call for the increase. Supporters say the increase is needed to fund county services properly. Some opponents say an increase is illegal, and Commissioner Liz Hausmann, who represents a portion of North Fulton and voted against the hike, says the county should focus on managing costs instead. The hearings will take place July 9 at 10 a.m. and 6 p.m., and on July 16 at 10 a.m. at the Fulton County Government Center, 141 Pryor St., Atlanta.
DOT raising speed limits on I-285 The Georgia Department of Transportation plans to raise the speed limit along the “top end” of the Perimeter to 65 mph starting in September. The change from the current 55-mph speed limit will be part of a DOT plan to implement variable speed limits along the 36-mile segment of I-285 north of the I-20 interchanges, DOT said on its website. DOT said variable speed limits change based on road, traffic and weather conditions. Electronic signs slow traffic ahead of congestion or bad weather to smooth out flow, diminish stop-and-go conditions and reduce crashes. For more information: www.dot. ga.gov/travelingingeorgia/Pages/VSL. aspx SS
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SPECIAL
Allyson Reed (left) with the Chattahoochee River National Recreation Area teaches KSU students about the history of the river.
KSU study: Yard clippings, dog waste polluting local streams CONTINUED FROM PAGE 1
The class started after Farmer came across a study of Long Island Creek conducted in 2001 by KSU Professor Mark Patterson and got in touch with him. Farmer asked Patterson if he would be interested in following up on the study. Patterson, along with fellow professor Nancy Hoalst-Pullen, Farmer and Patty Berkovitz of the Watershed Allliance, starting devising a full-credit summer course giving geography students realworld experience in the field. “On average we have 18 to 24 students each summer,” said Patterson, adding that during the course students conduct studies such as water quality testing and urban tree risk assessment. Students in KSU’s Watershed Assessment and Watershed Analysis classes say that while overall the streams are in good condition, there are signs of pollution, in some cases, extreme. “In only the second week, one site found extremely high E. coliform counts,” Patterson said. The Watershed Alliance subsequently alerted Fulton County and the city of Sandy Springs of the high E. coli counts, and also notified nearby homeowners of the risk. The county found a manhole overflow and notified the Environmen-
tal Protection Division. The water was treated, and the numbers started coming back down. Student Amy Taylor described her team’s experience in monitoring a section of Long Island Creek. “Our biggest concerns on this watershed were mainly the yards that were right next to this site,” she said. “We found traces of animal waste decomposing near the stream and in the yards.” Taylor also noted erosion taking place on the stream banks, exposing roots and contributing to potential tree collapses, which also dam up the stream and cause further pollution. Overall the students found E. coli levels in both streams troubling, noting that growing amounts of impervious surfaces that come with new development are also a factor in the pollution along with yard and pet waste. But while the biological conditions of the streams need monitoring, the students found that it’s not all bad news for the two urban watersheds. The students found pH balances and dissolved oxygen, which allows aquatic life to breathe, to be in acceptable ranges. “Surprisingly, given how many manicured lawns there are, they’re not finding a lot of [fertilizer traces] in the water,” Patterson said.
KSU students in the school’s Watershed Assessment and Watershed Analysis classes are pictured with the Watershed Alliance’s Patty Berkovitz (center, pink shirt) and Dick Farmer (right, blue shirt.) SS
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COMMENTARY Reporter Newspapers Our mission is to provide our readers with fresh and engaging information about life in their communities. Published by Springs Publishing LLC 6065 Roswell Road, Suite 225 Sandy Springs, GA 30328 Phone: 404-917-2200 • Fax: 404-917-2201 Brookhaven Reporter | Buckhead Reporter Dunwoody Reporter | Sandy Springs Reporter www.ReporterNewspapers.net Atlanta INtown www.AtlantaINtownPaper.com
C ON T A C T U S
Founder & Publisher Steve Levene stevelevene@reporternewspapers.net Editorial Managing Editor Joe Earle joeearle@reporternewspapers.net
Q&A S T RE E T TA LK
Q: Should Georgia legalize the use of marijuana for medical purposes?
More than 20 states have legalized the use of marijuana for medical treatment. An effort to add Georgia to the list failed in the 2014 Legislature, but state lawmakers are taking a new look at the issue, and Gov. Nathan Deal has said he has talked to federal officials about allowing clinical trials using a marijuana derivative to treat children with seizure disorders. We asked people in Reporter Newspapers communities whether they thought Georgia should allow marijuana to be used for medical purposes. Here’s what they had to say. “Absolutely. We lived in California for three years, so we understand what it’s like to live in a state with marijuana for medical uses. I’ve had many family members, friends, who had cancer who would have benefited from it. ... There’s no reason for it not to be available if someone really needs it.”
Amy Wade
“I don’t know that I have a strong opinion. Based on anecdotal evidence I’ve seen, I’d say yes, but I’d like to see more convincing arguments pro and against. I feel that everything out there now is political posturing rather than real scientific data.”
Chris Scislowicz
“Yeah, probably. I have a good friend whose son has a very serious case of Crohn’s disease and that’s the only thing that gives him any pain relief. So in certain circumstances, it would be all right. But I don’t want my doctor using it, or anyone looking after my grandchildren!”
Judy Fowler
Intown Editor: Collin Kelley Associate Editor: Ann Marie Quill Copy Editor: Diane L. Wynocker Creative and Production Director of Creative & Interactive Media Christopher North chrisnorth@reporternewspapers.net Graphic Designer: Isadora Pennington Advertising Director of Sales Development Amy Arno amyarno@reporternewspapers.net Senior Account Executive Janet Porter
“Yes. Generally, I have concerns about its expanded use, but as I understand the bill [in the Georgia Legislature], I see benefits that go along with it without the risk, and I generally support the bill.”
“I think so, after seeing that young kids can benefit from it. I’m a new mother and can’t imagine not being able to use something that would benefit my child.”
“Sure. I think alcohol is more harmful than marijuana. It does much more harm and it’s perfectly legal. Especially for medical purposes, I don’t see any problems.”
Jenee Boler
Marshall Dees
Rob Wade
Account Executives Susan Lesesne Sales Consultants David Burleson Linda Howell Office Manager Deborah Davis deborahdavis@reporternewspapers.net
“Yes, as long as there are some controls on it.”
Sally Birsinger
Contributors Pat Fox, Jenna Goff, Collin Kelley Phil Mosier, Bob Pepalis
© 2014 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.
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“Sure. Studies have shown it works. I wouldn’t want to deny someone the opportunity to feel better.”
Kita Parker
Matt Lenarz
Free Home Delivery 65,000 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.
“Yes. I don’t like the idea of government regulating it. It violates civil liberties and costs the government a lot of money to enforce.”
“I don’t think so. Being a nurse, people already misuse other drugs, so of course they’re going to misuse marijuana.”
Angela Smith
JUNE 27 – JULY 10, 2014 | www.ReporterNewspapers.net
“No. Anything that takes away brain capacity contributes to medical costs. And it contributes to addictive behavior.”
Joseph Isagba
“I’m not against it. I think it can actually help someone who needs it. There’s always that fear people will abuse it.”
Ashley Rowlette SS
Perimeter Business A monthly section focusing on business in the Reporter Newspapers communities
Perimeter home sales rebound overall, but market for high-end houses stalls BY BOB PEPALIS The home-sales market in the Perimeter area appears to be rebounding, although high-end luxury homes may take months longer to sell than lower priced homes. For homes priced between $1.5 million and $3 million, “we’ve just been over-saturated. Now we are in an extreme buyer’s market,” said Cynthia Lippert, a broker for Keller Williams First Atlanta in Buckhead. She said the very small area of the Historic Brookhaven neighborhood fares better for the luxury market at the moment. The news is better for less expensive homes. David Hutchins, an associate broker with Re/Max, said houses for sale in the Perimeter area and priced $600,000 and below are moving very well, with a smaller supply than the demand. “The inventory of homes has fallen to five months or less in the $600,000 and under price point,” he said, referring to figures revealed in the “Absorption Analysis Reports” by FMLS, the local Atlanta listing service. “While we saw the market stabilize and even start to rebound in 2013, there remains one major challenge in 2014 – low inventory,” said Brett Duffy, managing broker for Coldwell Banker Residential Brokerage-Dunwoody. In May, 20,517 properties were available in metro Atlanta, up 6 percent from April, and 25 percent from May 2013. In May, just 255 properties were available in Dunwoody, up 13 percent from April and 21 percent from May 2013. “Finding buyers is no problem – there are plenty – but there aren’t enough properties to meet the demand, particularly in the Dunwoody area,” Duffy said. The average days on the market in May was 62, down from 70 days in April and 73 days last May. That’s a great sign for sellers. The low inventory of homes extends to Sandy Springs, Brookhaven and Buckhead, said Tony Floyd, chief marketing officer for Berkshire Hathaway HomeServices, Georgia Prop-
July 9th Young Professionals Mixers Alon’s Bakery 6:00-8:00 PM July 14th First Monday’s Networking da Via 5:30 –7:00 PM July 25th Coffee and Contacts Jahan—Morgan Falls Café 7:30-9:00 AM Register at www.DunwoodyChamber.com
erties. When they can’t find empty parcels, home buyers and developers have sought lots with existing homes to be torn down as new home sites. New construction has always been desireable near the Pe-
Reasons to Join The Dunwoody Chamber
TOP 3
July Events
ISADORA PENNINGTON
Michael Malloy, chief marketing officer for Ashton Woods Atlanta division, says demand has been strong around Brookhaven, Dunwoody and Sandy Springs.
1. Network People do business with people they know.
2. Engage in the Community Join the Dunwoody Chamber and City of Dunwoody to encourage long term sustainability by connecting our corporate partners to form bonds with local organizations and complete Community projects. 3. Gain Business We believe in your services. The Dunwoody Chamber gives member only business referrals.
rimeter area, Hutchins said. The new homes supply since the fourth quarter of 2007 has dropped so much that any new construction is doing well. Builders essentially did not build CONTINUED ON PAGE 12
Buckhead Business Association Presents
The July Signature Luncheon Join us for our BBA Signature Luncheon on July 24th at “The Estate” from 11:30 am - 1:30pm featuring keynote speaker Carol Tomé, CFO and Vice President of Corporate Services at The Home Depot. For additional information and to register visit:
BuckheadBusiness.org
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JUNE 27 – JULY 10, 2014 | 9
PERIMETER BUSINESS
Top-rated hot dogs make Chicagoans feel at home BY JOE EARLE
years, says he still buys all his sausages and meats from Chicago. joeearle@reporternewspapers.net “Everything has to be original from the city,” the 30-year-old Hajdarevic said. “You can’t make a Chicago Mike’s Hot Dogs serves up a bite of Chicago in downdog without a poppy seed bun. If I made them differtown Sandy Springs. ently, people would start riots.” Chicago blues play nonstop on the sound system. ImMike’s now sells more than 5,000 hot dogs a month, ages of Chicago institutions – the Cubs, the Bulls, the late Hajdarevic said after a quick calculation. And while actor John Belushi – cover the walls. Customers have conmost of Mike’s customers live in or near Sandy Springs, tributed expired Illinois license plates so the floor-to-ceilthe restaurant draws fans from across metro Atlanta, ing display bears an authentic touch of home. And the and even Tennessee, for special items such as its Italian biggest seller on the menu is, of course, the Chicago-style beef sandwich, he said. hot dog. At one time, prior Mike’s owners tried Chicago and its hot dogs have found fans expanding to other metro communities, in metro Atlanta. On June 16, Zagat, which Hajdarevic said. They planned to operate five provides customer-based restaurant views, JOE EARLE named Mike’s one of the 10 best hot dogs in Perime te r restaurants, he said, but the expansions all Mike’s Hot Dogs owner Elvis Hajdarevic in the Profile closed. Only the Sandy Springs location, the Sandy Springs restaurant that has offered a little metro Atlanta. Voters in the Atlanta Journal original, continues operation, he said. Constitution’s “Best of Atlanta” survey last bit of Chicago on a bun and on its walls since 1996. Hajdarevic, who came to the United year made it the top “reader’s pick” for hot States at age 16, said he was introduced to Mike’s when dogs. And yelp.com, the online review site, gives it four he was working at a discount store in the same shopping of five stars. who have been eating at its wooden booths for decades. mall. Hot dogs reminded him of a kind of sausage he’d eat“My expectations were lowered because, let’s face it, Some paired photos depict customers when they were en in his home in eastern Europe, so he ate at Mike’s all the south of the Mason-Dixon Line, you couldn’t pay me to children and then again as adults. “There’s something for time, he said. “I was the biggest customer,” he said. eat a hot dog,” one Yelp reviewer wrote. “I’ve had the best everyone on this wall,” Hajdarevic said. “Niney-nine perAfter he bought the business, he made sure to change and that’s that. However, I had a wonderful surprise when cent of my customers see something they like. ... See this little so he could continue its appeal. He did start playing I ate my hot dog. It felt like home.” [photo of a] little girl? That’s her right here [in another blues on the sound system – earlier owners liked 1960s That’s been a big part of Mike’s appeal from the start. photo nearby]. She’s even bigger now. She walked in a coumusic, such as the Beatles, on the soundtrack – and kept Mike Sweeney, who gave the place its name, opened the ple of days ago.” adding images of Chicago and other bits of Americana to restaurant to serve Chicago-style food, including the city’s Mike’s customers keep coming back, so he’ll keep servthe display Sweeney had started on the restaurant walls, hot dogs dressed with tomatoes, peppers and the like, ing up Mike’s Chicago Hot Dogs. And he’ll keep eathe said. “He came up with it, but it wasn’t this good,” Polish sausages and Italian beef, still the mainstays of the ing them, too. “I love them. I still love them,” he said, Hajdarevic said. “I made it better.” menu. Elvis Hajdarevic, a Bosnian refugee who bought grinning. “I actually had one earlier today. As a qualiHe points to photos on display of Mike’s customers the restaurant 3½ years ago after managing it for four ty check.”
6065 Roswell Road, Atlanta, GA 30328
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welcomes the following new tenants! • Crouse Rehab Associates, Inc. (physical therapy) • Hammond Group, P.C. • Boutte Contour Surgery and Dermatology, P.C. • J. Morris Kaplan Communities, LLC • J. W. Llop, CPA, P.C. • Bobby E. Butler • Susan Hubeny Leasing information John Baker • Jeanette Reed 404-459-4300 • National Exchange Group, LLC Jbaker@bdgre.com
PERIMETER BUSINESS Local officials welcome a new bank and boulevard
SPECIAL
The Sandy Springs Chamber of Commerce recently helped the Bank of Sandy Springs, located at 6000 Sandy Springs Circle, celebrate its ribbon cutting. From left, Jim Kelley, Steve Harmon, John Howard, Bill O pe nin gs Creekmuir, Chris Burnett, Bank of Sandy Springs, market president, Eva Galambos, former Sandy Springs mayor, Mayor Rusty Paul, Linda Edwards Theos, Lesley Panos and Michel Panos.
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Streetscape project celebrated Members from the Perimeter Community Improvement Districts (PCIDs) Boards, Perimeter Business Alliance Board of Trustees, and representatives from Dunwoody and Sandy Springs gathered June 20 to celebrate completing a streetscape enhancement project at Lake Hearn Drive and Perimeter Summit Parkway. Front, from left, Diane Calloway and Jennifer Harper, program manager, PCIDs. Standing, from left, Richard Meehan, Brookhaven Public Works, Donna Mahaffey, chief of staff, PCIDs, Rebecca Chase William, Brookhaven City Council, Terry Nall, Dunwoody City Council, Yvonne Williams, president & CEO, PCIDs, David Spotts, Eric Hubbard, with Congressman Hank Johnson’s office, Robert Voyles, Russ Davis, Mark Kilby, Dennis Burnette and Kevin Ergle. Financed through a $3.1 million Transportation Enhancement Grant from the Atlanta Regional Commission, the project includes the redesign of pedestrian crossings, new sidewalks, improved signal timing, landscaped medians, and installation of bikes lanes to create more efficient traffic patterns and to improve pedestrian safety.
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JUNE 27 – JULY 10, 2014 | www.ReporterNewspapers.net
BOB PEPALIS
Rockhaven Homes is building high-end custom homes in its Falkirk subdivision in Dunwoody. This company recently marked this home as sold before construction was completed.
Perimeter home sales market rebounds overall CONTINUED FROM PAGE 9
any new housing for the past three to four years. Leigh Schiff of Schiff Realty Partners said it is a seller’s market. “Good homes are experiencing multiple offers within the first 72 hours on the market,” she said. “These offers often result in offers above list price and without contingencies.” Her clients have seen success particularly over the last year and a half since the market has turned. Ashton Woods, a national developer, has experienced strong demand in its neighborhoods throughout metro Atlanta, and in particular at locations in and around Brookhaven, Sandy Springs and Dunwoody, said Michael Malloy, chief marketing officer for the company’s Atlanta division. He said the market has steadily improved over the past few years as interest rates have remained low, demand has been steady and people have been able to sell their existing homes quicker than years past. Ashton Woods has seen more buyers move up to a higher price point. “The biggest difference we see is the increasing cost of land and increased demand as more developers are seeking “A” locations,” Malloy said. At a price point between $200,000 and
$750,000, the 2014 real estate market is performing better than 2013, both in value and sales, Floyd said. Investor deals and foreclosures made last year have resulted in fewer homes priced at $200,000 or less this year. “Some areas still have substantial short sales and foreclosures. Some areas, such as Buckhead, Sandy Springs and Brookhaven have none,” Lippert said. “I think the long-term outlook for real estate is good,” Lippert said. In 2006, when the market was peaking in metro Atlanta, there were about 60,000 new homes being sold, Floyd said. During the recession, it was down to about 5,000. At the recent “smart housing” conference, Floyd said it was shown that based on current numbers, approximately 16,000 new homes will be built in 2014. About 70 percent of those sales are presales. New home prices are rising rapidly because of the short supply, high demand, issues with availability of labor, raw material costs rising and the time to get permits increasing. “They just simply can’t get them out of the ground fast enough,” Floyd said. He said brokers hope 20,000 to 25,000 new homes will be sold by next year, which will look more like what a market should be.
“Finding buyers is no problem – there are plenty – but there aren’t enough properties to meet the demand.” – BRETT DUFFY MANAGING BROKER FOR COLDWELL BANKER RESIDENTIAL BROKERAGE—DUNWOODY
PERIMETER BUSINESS Tightening market The market is tightening for homes priced below $500,000, real estate agents say. But the inventory of high-priced homes is high. Metro Atlanta closings in May Price Less than $100,000 $100,000-$200,000 $200,000-$500,000 $500,000-$1 million $1 million -$2 million $2 million +
Number of Transactions 654 1,636 2,077 439 66 7
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Months of housing inventory on market in metro Atlanta in May Price Months of Inventory Less than $100,000 3.4 $100,000-$200,000 3.2 $200,000-$500,000 4.4 $500,000-$1 million 6.4 $1 million-$2 million 13.1 $2 million+ 40 Overall 4.2 Source: Metro Atlanta Market Trends June 2014, Trendgraphix/ BHHS Georgia Properties Baby Boomers and Gen-Xers are leading home sales, with people buying a second home following behind. Floyd thinks part of what drives this trend is that first-time buyers can’t find homes they can afford that they like as prices rise. Qualifying for mortgages is back to
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PERIMETER BUSINESS
Real Estate Problems?
Business Briefs
• Pre-Foreclosure • Divorce • Back Taxes • Inherited Property • Vacant Property • Simply Need Cash • Out-of-State Landlord • “Bad” Tenants • Just Want Out! I believe there is a solution for every Real Estate Problem out there and I would be honored to help you if you are experiencing any difficulty with disposing of a Problem House, Vacant Lot or Commercial Building. I’ve had the privilege of helping people in the Atlanta area since 1997 get quick cash for their unwanted Real Estate (Houses, Lots, Apartments and Small Commercial Buildings) by assisting them in selling to Investors who have CASH! We seldom make offers, but prefer to give people what they want if at all possible, so please call 404-593-0875 with the amount you desire for your property and how soon you wish to close and receive your cash.
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Atlanta eye-care provider Thomas Eye Group is celebrating 40 years in business. Founded by doctors W. Kevin Thomas and Stephen B. Levine, Thomas Eye Group has served the metro Atlanta community since 1974. The company began as a general ophthalmology practice in Sandy Springs with Thomas seeing adult patients and Levine treating pediatric patients. Over the years, the practice has steadily grown to eight locations around metro Atlanta. Sandy Springs-based Atlanta-Israel Chamber of Commerce has changed its name to conexx: America Israel Business Connector. Joel Neuman, chairman of conexx, said the change was made “to establish a clearer message about who we are and what we do.” The new name was announced June 10. “We hope that our new branding adequately reflects our unique ability to connect U.S. companies with Israeli innovation, and create the environment that supports communities of opportunity in both Israel and the Southeast [United States],” Shai Robkin, president and CEO of the organization said. Big Scary Cranium, an Atlanta-based digital marketing agency owned by Brookhaven resident Rich Wilson, was named Silverpop’s B2B Agency of the Year at its annual customer conference. Big Scary Cranium said it was the only Atlanta company, and the only boutique agency, to receive the honor. “As one of the ‘little guys’ in the space, it is tremendously satisfying to receive this type of recognition from Silverpop, one of our most valued technology partners,” Wilson said.
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The Mortgage Bankers Association of Georgia (MBAG) Board of Governors has elected John David, “J.D.” Crowe, president of Southeast Mortgage of Georgia, Inc., to serve as 2014-2015 president of the association. The MBAG is a trade association comprised of mortgage lenders, brokers and affiliated industry associates dedicated to the preservation and improvement of the mortgage banking correspondent system. Crowe will serve a one-year term. Office rents in the Central Perimeter market are hitting new peaks, according to a report in the Atlanta Business Chronicle. Rents at trophy office properties in Sandy Springs and Dunwoody have been climbing to the range of $27 to $28 a foot for the past year, and some floors are renting for $30 a foot, according to market data, the newspaper reported. That’s higher than rents were at the peak in 2008, the newspaper said. After more than 20 years on Roswell Road, Ruth’s Chris Steak House is moving from Sandy Springs to Alpharetta, according to the Atlanta Business Chronicle. The new 18,000-square-foot restaurant will sit on 2.3-acres on Haynes Bridge Road. The old Sandy Springs location has been sold and will be renovated into a new concept, according to the report.
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Insperity, Inc., a provider of human resources and business performance solutions, has announced the winners of its 2014 Insperity Merit Scholarship, including Brooke Gentry, a graduate of North Atlanta High School. Brooke plans to attend Colby College in Waterville, Maine. She was both a Georgia Governor’s Honors and a Posse Scholarship nominee her junior year. She is the daughter of Boyd and Kathleen Gentry.
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Aerospace Engineering
Monday, June 30, 10:30-11:15 a.m. – Kids, come to the Buckhead Branch Library to see airbrush artist Michael White, illustrator of “The Library Dragon” and “Return of the Library Dragon.” For ages 4-12. Free, and all are welcome. 269 Buckhead Ave., NE, Atlanta, 30305. Email: comments@ co.fulton.ga.us or call 404-814-3500 for details.
Monday, July 7, 4-5 p.m. – 3-2-1...blast off and learn all about aerospace engineering! Join others ages 4-14 for this science lesson. Free, and the community is welcome. Open to the first 30 participants. Call 770-512-4640 to register and find out more. Dunwoody Branch Library, 5339 ChambleeDunwoody Rd., Dunwoody, 30338.
Fossils are Fun
Building Wristbands
Monday, June 30, 1-1:45 p.m. – Learn about fossil animals, fish, amphibians, reptiles and dinosaurs! Handle the fossils, and take home a sample. Free. For ages 5-12. Open to the community. Reservations required by calling 404-814-3508 or emailing: comments@co.fulton.ga.us. Northside Branch Library, 3295 Northside Parkway, NW, Atlanta, 30327.
Tuesday, July 8, 1:30-2:30 p.m. – Learn how to build a switch to turn your LED on and off. Practice making wristbands for your favorite team and school. Free. The public is welcome. Open to rising middle school and high school youth. Find out more and register by calling 404-303-6130 or emailing: marlan.brinkley@fultoncountyga.gov. Sandy Springs Branch Library, 395 Mount Vernon Highway, Sandy Springs, 30328.
Pure Magic Monday, June 30, 4-4:45 p.m. – The mag-
ical Mr. McClure dazzles you with his tricks! Free and open to all. Suitable for ages 5-12. Dunwoody Branch Library, 5339 Chamblee-Dunwoody Rd., Dunwoody, 30338. Call 770-512-4640 for information.
Movie Time Thursday, July 3, 10:30-11 a.m. – Chil-
dren ages 2-5 will enjoy a series of short films with favorite characters from children’s books, with each film approximately 30 minutes long. From 11:30 a.m.-12:30 p.m., older children ages 5-12 will see two science films, “Stormchasers” and “Rockfinders.” Free and open to the community. Groups of five or more must register by calling 404-814-3500. Buckhead Branch Library, 269 Buckhead Ave., NE, Atlanta, 30305. Email: comments@co.fulton.ga.us to learn more.
Kuumba Storyteller
3887 Peachtree Road, Buckhead/Brookhaven And Other Locations 404-816-2229 | www.ChinChinAtlanta.com
Thursday, July 3, 10:30-11:15 a.m. – Ernestine Brown, animated and seasoned storyteller, performs for children ages 4 and up and their families. Free, and all are welcome. Call the Buckhead Branch Library at 404-814-3500 for further details. Performance at the Sunshine House, 135 W. Wieuca Rd., NE, Atlanta, 30342. Email: comments@co.fulton. ga.us with questions.
Princess & The Pea
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In print and online.
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JUNE 27 – JULY 10, 2014 | www.ReporterNewspapers.net
Monday, July 7, 2-2:45 p.m. – Can a tiny
green pea hidden under a dozen mattresses prove whether a young lady is royal or regular person? Find out in this audience participation musical. Suitable for ages 5-12. Free and open to all. Northside Branch Library, 3295 Northside Parkway, NW, Atlanta, 30327. Call 404-814-3508 to learn more. Sandy Springs Library also hosts the free show, appropriate for ages 3 and up, on July 8, 10:30-11:30 a.m. No reservations required. 395 Mount Vernon Highway, Sandy Springs, 30328. Call 404-303-6130 or email: comments@co.fulton.ga.us for details.
Fizz, Boom, Pop Wednesday, July 9, 10:30-11:30 a.m. –
Discover the chemistry that is all around you, from exploding film canisters to electrifying indoor lightning. Free for all young scientists! Suitable for ages 4-12. Sandy Springs Branch Library, 395 Mount Vernon Highway, Sandy Springs, 30328. Call 404303-6130 or email: comments@co.fulton.ga.us or for additional information.
Juggler Extraordinaire Wednesday, July 9, 10:30-11:30 a.m. –
Adam Boehmer has been captivating audiences with his juggling, gymnastics and unicycling skills for over a decade. Come see for yourself! Free, and open to the public. For ages 3 and up. Sandy Springs Branch Library, 395 Mount Vernon Highway, Sandy Springs, 30328. Email: comments@co.fulton.ga.us or call 404-303-6130 with questions.
Ladybugs Wednesday, July 9, 3-3:45 p.m. – Sarah Brodd, with the DeKalb Cooperative Extension, demonstrates a fun ladybug craft and activity. For ages 3-5. Free. Open to the first 10 participants. For groups of five or more, call the Brookhaven Branch Library at 404-848-7140. 1242 N. Druid Hills Rd., NE, Brookhaven, 30319.
Fizzing Folktales Wednesday, July 9, 3:30-4:15 p.m. – Lis-
ten to folktales from around the world about volcanoes, earthquakes, lightning and more. Free. Open to the community. Suitable for ages 4-12. Northside Branch Library, 3295 Northside Parkway, NW, Atlanta, 30327. Call 404-814-3508 or email: comments@co.fulton.ga.us for details.
FOR KIDS
BOLD& JUICY Teen Improv 101
Teen Business Challenge Thursday, July 10, 12-1:45 p.m. – Junior
Achievement helps youth discover a market need, and create and market the product. Open to rising middle school and high school students. Continues Thursdays through July 31. Free. The community is welcome. Ask questions and register by calling 404303-6130 or emailing: marlan.brinkley@fultoncountyga.gov. Sandy Springs Branch Library, 395 Mount Vernon Highway, Sandy Springs, 30328.
Turtle Tours Saturday, July 12, 11 a.m.-12 p.m. – Heritage San-
dy Springs’ “Turtle Tours,” an educational series appropriate for children ages 2-5, continues. In this program, join museum mascots Spring and Sandy as they “rock out with rocks.” Free; donations encouraged. No reservations required. 6075 Sandy Springs Circle, Sandy Springs, 30328. For more information, email: kbrigance@heritagesandysprings.org, call 404-851-9111 or visit: www. heritagesandysprings.org.
PERFORMING ARTS
Israel Scout Caravan
Grains of Sand
Monday, June 30, 7 p.m. – The Israel Scout
Friendship Caravan performs in Atlanta! The 10 Israeli scouts, ages 16-18, bring a love of Israel through song and dance, performing in English, Hebrew and Yiddish. Tickets: $5 per person or $10 for a family of four. Temple Emanu-El, 1580 Spalding Dr., NE, Sandy Springs, 30350. For more information, visit: www.israelscouts. org, email: patpugrant@aol.com or call 678-8807170.
LEARN SOMETHING
Enrichment Classes
IT ADM
ONE
Thursday, July 10, 10 a.m. – Inquisitive adults age 55 or older are invited to Lifespan Academy, an enrichment and education program! Classes include: Remembrance of WWII; art history; technology; your partner in aging; investing and finance; Tai Chi; and line dancing. Classes continue Thursdays through August 14. $59; lunch available for a fee. Cathedral of St. Philip, 2744 Peachtree Rd., NW, Atlanta, 30305. For details and registration, go to: www.lifespanseniorresources.com or call 404-237-7307.
certs by the Springs continues its 18th season by welcoming the Grains of Sand band, featuring beach, Motown and soul music. Free and open to the community. Picnic baskets, coolers and blankets welcome. No outside tables. Pets and smoking are not permitted. Gates open at 5 p.m. Heritage Green, on the Sandy Springs Society Entertainment Lawn, 6110 Bluestone Rd., NE, Sandy Springs, 30328. Call 404-851-9111, visit: www. heritagesandysprings.org or email: murphy@heritagesandysprings.org for more information.
Submit listings to Calendar@ReporterNewspapers.net
Thu
Buckhead
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Bro
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Sandy Springs
4365 Roswell Rd., Atlanta Roswell-Wieuca Shopping Center
5975 Roswell Rd., Sandy Springs Next to Lowe’s
678-732-9531
404-600-2484
Savor Sandy Springs Arte Antoniades and Nik Panagopoulos, the brother and sister team from the critically acclaimed Fishmonger Restaurant, deliver exquisite, inexpensive Mexican cuisine with a global twist at Teela Taqueria, located in the Heart of Sandy Springs at the City Walk shopping center. They have created a menu with strong, bold tastes such as the Southern BLT Tacos with fried green tomatoes and the Crab and Shrimp Taco, while offering traditional samplers to mix and match.
Artemis “Arte” Antoniades
sk
Oglethorpe University
Nikitas “Nik” Panagopoulos
Teela Taqueria 227 Sandy Springs Place NE www.teelataqueria.com
There are more than 100 full-service fine dining restaurants in Sandy Springs. Reserve a table and enjoy a delicious meal in our community! For more information about dining in Sandy Springs, please visit:
http://www.visitsandysprings.org
Free movies
g l y 3 1 s t Located on Peachtree n i Ju Road adjacent to i n n ough
Thr g B ersdays -
with purchase of fries and drink
Cannot be combined with any other coupon. Expires 7/10/14
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Sunday, July 13, 7-8:30 p.m. – Con-
FREE Bobby’s Classic Single Cheeseburger
JULY 10: Despicable Me 2 JULY 17: Footloose (1984) JULY 24: Roman Holiday JULY 31: Breakfast at Tiffany’s
Presented by:
Sponsored by:
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Thursday, July 10, 10:30-11:15 a.m. – Author Ivonne Hernandez, mother of an autistic son, reads her new book to children ages 5-12. Through the characteristics of animals, listeners learn what it is like to be autistic, and how to be a friend to an autistic child. Free. Open to everyone. Buckhead Branch Library, 269 Buckhead Ave., NE, Atlanta, 30305. Email: comments@co.fulton.ga.us or call 404-814-3500 for further information.
acting skills, while boosting confidence and learning to think on your feet. Learn different techniques through theater games and exercises. Free. For ages 12-18. Space limited to 20 participants. Get details and register by calling 404-814-3500 or emailing: amy. alexander@fultoncountyga.gov. Buckhead Branch Library, 269 Buckhead Ave., NE, Atlanta, 30305.
and by visiting our website
Animals, Love, Friendship
Thursday, July 10, 1-2 p.m. – Develop public speaking and
Facebook.com/TownBrookhaven
Wednesday, July 9, 4-5 p.m. – Children ages 8-12 will learn the fundamentals of playing the ukulele. Free. The public is welcome to attend. Open to the first 15 participants. Call 770-512-4640 or visit the Dunwoody Branch Library to register or with questions. 5339 Chamblee-Dunwoody Rd., Dunwoody, 30338.
ONE YEAR ANNIVERSARY SPECIAL
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Ukulele Workshop
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Come and Celebrate Living!
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He tied your shoes He was your chauffeur He was your mentor And you will never forget that He is your HERO Peregrine’s Landing: a Memory Care Community where Dads are our HEROes too.
Call to schedule a tour 770-803-0100. www.PeregrinePeachtree.com 18
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JUNE 27 – JULY 10, 2014 | www.ReporterNewspapers.net
Rockets will glare and bombs will burst in air as Reporter Newspapers communities celebrate the Fourth of July. Here are some places to sit back and celebrate the July 4 holiday by catching a parade or a fireworks show.
How much: Free For more info: www.peachtreeroadrace.org
The annual Dunwoody Fourth of July Parade
What: The city of Sandy Springs’ Fourth of July celebration includes a performance by the band Shiloh and a fireworks show. Guests are invited to bring a snack and a blanket to enjoy the evening on the lawn, but pets, tents, outdoor cooking and sparklers are prohibited. Where: The Concourse Corporate Center Lawn, 5 Concourse Parkway NE, 30328 When: Music kicks off at 7:30 p.m., followed by the fireworks show at 9:45 p.m. How much: Free For more info: www. sandyspringsga.gov
What: The largest parade in the state of Georgia promises marching bands, floats, clowns, animals and local celebrities. Music from the 116th National Army Guard will follow the parade, along with a presentation of parade awards. Hot dogs, BBQ and grilled sausages will also be available for purchase. Where: The parade will start at the intersection of Mount Vernon and Jett Ferry roads, and proceed to Dunwoody Village Parkway, Dunwoody, 30338. When: The parade steps off Friday, July 4, at 9 a.m. How much: Free For more info: www.dunwoodyga.org
Lenox Square’s 55th annual Legendary Fourth of July Festivities What: The celebration offers music from Sons of Sailors, an Athens-based band, and Party on the Moon, a cover band from Atlanta. There will also be a Kid Zone and food concessions. The evening will culminate with a fireworks show. Where: Lenox Square Mall, 3393 Peachtree Road NE, Atlanta, 30326 When: Friday, July 4, from 10 a.m. to 10 p.m. The mall’s shops and restaurants will be open from 10 a.m. to 6 p.m., music will begin at 6 p.m., and the fireworks show will start at about 9:40 p.m. How much: Free For more info: www.simon.com/mall/ lenox-square
The Peachtree Road Race What: Atlanta’s annual 10K race invites runners to celebrate the Fourth of July. Registration is full, but volunteers and spectators are welcome. Where: The race starts at Lenox Square in Buckhead and travels down Peachtree to 10th Street in Midtown. The finish is located on 10th Street just outside of Piedmont Park. When: The race begins with the wheelchair race at 6:45 a.m. and continues until the last official start time at 9:05 a.m.
Sandy Springs’ Stars and Stripes Celebration
Chamblee’s Fourth of July Celebration What: The event will feature concessions from popular food trucks, a bike parade from Chamblee Middle School, activity booths, train rides and a cornhole tournament. The band The Mustangs will perform. The evening concludes with a fireworks show. Where: Keswick Park Soccer Field, 3496 Keswick Drive, 30341 When: Concessions and activity booths are open from 5 to 9 p.m.; the parade starts at 5 p.m.; train rides from 5 to 8 p.m.; the cornhole tournament is at 6 p.m.; music from 6 to 9 p.m.; and the fireworks show will begin at 9:15 p.m. or after dark. How much: Free For more info: www.chambleega.com
Annual Chastain Park Fourth of July Parade What: Chastain Park invites families and friends to the 7th annual parade. Children are encouraged to decorate their bikes, tricycles, scooters and more, and join in the parade. The celebration will continue at the Chastain Pool. Where: Parade route starts at the intersection of Dudley Lane and West Wieuca, and continues down West Wieuca to Pool Road. When: Parade lineup starts at 11 a.m., beginning at 11:30 a.m. and ending at noon. The pool celebration will be from noon to 3 p.m. How much: Free For more info: chastainpark.org –Compiled by Jenna Goff
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JUNE 27 – JULY 10, 2014 | 19
out & about
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JUNE 27 – JULY 10, 2014 | www.ReporterNewspapers.net
Georgia Shakespeare recreates classic fairy tale for stage BY JENNA GOFF Georgia Shakespeare’s newest production for families, The Frog Prince, is a locally produced retelling of the classic Brothers Grimm tale. From the music and lyrics to the actors on stage, all involved in the creation of the show hail from the Atlanta area. Allen O’Reilly, the show’s director, has been a name in local theater for many years. “I’ve done 24 seasons with Georgia Shakespeare as an actor,” he said. “And I’ve been involved in probably every children’s theater in town.” O’Reilly calls The Frog Prince one of the best children’s productions he’s been involved with. “It is a highly, highly entertaining show,” he said. “The score, the acting ability, and the set are all SPECIAL remarkable.” Georgia Shakespeare’s The Frog Prince Jennifer Bauer-Lyons, will entertain both children and adults. managing director with Georgia Shakespeare, agrees that the show -- one of two the theater story that they have come to love. is staging in July -- is truly special. “UnThe production follows the relationlike our shows that have featured music ship between Princess Alaina and the in the past, this play is a full-on musiFrog Prince, both portrayed by student cal,” she said. “Our performances will be actors from local universities. After the its world premier.” princess loses her golden ball in a well, Melanie Martin Long, a local playshe promises her friendship to the frog if wright and lyricist, wrote the show, and he will retrieve it. This promise is quickJames Woodward, an Atlanta-based muly broken, but as the frog sticks around, sician, provided the music. “Long took Alaina begins to realize he is more than the best parts of the story to create a livemeets the eye. ly, fun and funny version,” said O’Reilly. “There are some scary aspects and “And Woodward’s score will have people some great, magical aspects,” Bauer-Lyhumming the tunes long after they’ve ons said. “And like every fairy tale, there left the theater.” are life lessons to be learned.” At the heart of it, though, the show In addition to “The Frog Prince,” still remains a classic fairy tale. AudiencGeorgia Shakespeare is staging a show es will find many aspects of the Grimm for adults in July. “One Man, Two Guvnors” runs July 9 to July 27. These lessons can be enjoyed by children and adults alike. While the show is What: Georgia Shakespeare‘s aimed at children, O’Reilly thinks that productions of The Frog Prince adults will get a kick out of it, too. “The and One Man, Two Guvnors show is the best kind of children’s theater,” he said. “Children will enjoy the Where: Georgia Shakespeare humor, the music, and the story, but at Oglethorpe University, adults will get some jokes and have a 4484 Peachtree Rd., NE, Brookhaven, 30319 good time, too.” The quality of the show even paralWhen: The Frog Prince lels that of an adult production. “It is a runs from July 1-26 main stage show, so no expenses have One Man, Two Guvnors runs been spared,” said Bauer-Lyons. “Like from July 9-27 all our shows, it is a high-quality, full production.” How much: General admission From the local talent behind for The Frog Prince is $10 the scenes to onstage, all have been Tickets for One Man, Two working hard. “It’s a big show,” said Guvnors range from $15 to $35 O’Reilly. “It’s not a normal children’s show where you have a box and some For more info: www.gashakespeare.org costumes. This is different. It’s a real musical.”
FAITH
Ramadan brings fasting, ‘heightened focus’ on God and community BY JENNA GOFF Starting June 29, Ashraf Awad and Children may refrain from fastBut the Awads his family will wake up before dawn ing. There also are exceptions for those sometimes face chalevery morning for a month. who are pregnant, traveling, suffering lenges from those The day marks the ninth month from chronic diseases, and the elderly. curious about their of the Islamic calendar, which will But to make up for not fasting, these faith. “It often be the beginning of Ramadan for Muslims often buy meals for the less takes a little longer the Brookhaven family and Muslims fortunate in the spirit of Ramadan. to build bridges of around the world. “One of the comcommunity,” Awad In the Islammon ways to give said. ic faith, Ramadan back is to sponsor a This doesn’t stop is the holiest peridinner,” said Awad. him from reaching “One of the common od of the year. It is “The meals are alout to others. He ways to give back is a holiday that focusways sponsored out and his wife, Noor, es largely on fastof charity.” are part of the Islamto sponsor a dinner. ing, with the goal Awad said that it ic Speakers Bureau The meals are always of building a stronhasn’t been hard to of Atlanta, an orgager relationship with sponsored out of charity.” find a large Muslim nization devoted to God, Awad said. population around developing underThe Awads wake Atlanta with whom standing and aware– ASHRAF AWAD up every morning to share these meals. ness about Islam and during Ramadan for He’s also found a Muslims. SPECIAL a pre-dawn meal. very supportive “The ISB offers Ashraf Awad and his wife Noor, with “Prayer follows the community of peotours of mosques, so sons Omar, 8, and Ahmed, 4, celebrate meal, and we continue the fast until ple in Brookhaven. that people can see Ramadan starting this month. sunset,” Awad said. “We break the fast “My wife and I love Brookhaven,” how it is from the “Ramadan is a time of community,” with dates and water, followed by evehe INTRODUCE said. “It’s a very accommodating, inside,” Awad said. YOUR EARS TO THE FIRST he said. “While you build on strengthning prayer and a meal.” open-minded community. We’ve been He also stressed that mosques’ Rama* ONLYupINVISIBLE 24/7 HEARING dan AID.dinners are open to members of ening your personal relationship with Fasting is an essential component ableAND to open to share our traditions God, it’s also about time together.” of the Awads’ faith. “Fasting during and food.” any faith. Ramadan is one of the Five Pillars of FINALLY,for EFFORTLESS HEARING Lyric® Consultation Islam,” said Awad. “We abstain from a Complimentary food and drink during sunlight hours to focus on our devotion to God.” and Hearing Screening. EVEN SHOWERPROOF** The Five Pillars of Islam are requirefor a Complimentary Lyric® Consultation ®® ments that every Muslim must fulfill for a Complimentary Lyric Consultation Complimentary Lyric Consultation CLEAR, NATURAL SOUND QUALITY and Hearing Screening. to live a good life. The fact that one of them focuses solely on Ramadan Hearing Screening. and Hearing Screening. ®® Consultation for Complimentary speaks to the holiday’s importance. NOa TO CHANGELyric for aBATTERIES Complimentary Lyric Now Fitting Newest LyricConsultation Technology! The Quran, according to Islamand Hearing Screening. Please call today: and Hearing Screening. ic tradition, first was revealed to the ® Prophet Muhammad during the for aFitting Complimentary Consultation Buckhead Now Newest LyricLyric Technology! month of Ramadan. Because of this Please call today: occurrence, Muslims spend additional 2140 Peachtree Road NW and Screening. NowHearing Fitting Newest Lyric Technology! Now Fitting Lyric Lyric,Newest the world’s firstTechnology! sweat® and only 100% invisible, 24/7 wearable, time in prayer. “It is a time of heightPlease callsweattoday: Buckhead Lyric, the world’s and only 100% invisible, 24/7Suite wearable, for a Complimentary Lyric first Consultation Please 350 device can.call today: proof, shower-proof, for-months-at-a-time * hearing ened focus,” said Awad. “There are ex** proof, shower-proof, for-months-at-a-time hearing device can. 2140 Peachtree Road NW30309 tra prayers and extra time spent recitNow Fitting Newest Lyric Technology! Atlanta, Georgia and Hearing Screening. Helena Kadyn Buckhead FINALLY, EFFORTLESS HEARING Now Fitting Newest Lyric Technology! Please call today: Buckhead ing the Quran.” Solodar, Au.D. Williams, Au.D. FINALLY, EFFORTLESS HEARING Please call today: CAN. ® Suite 350 404-935-0887 for a Complimentary Lyric Consultation While in this sense, Ramadan is a 2140 Peachtree Road NWNW NATURAL SOUND QUALITY Amplifies natural sound. Wear 24/7. CLEAR, 100% invisible. 2140 Peachtree Road largely personal holiday, fasting also CLEAR, NATURAL SOUND QUALITY Audiological Consultants of Atlanta, Georgia 30309 Buckhead S T FI W O N NowHearing Fitting Newest Lyric Technology! Buckhead and Screening. encourages Muslims to think about Suite 350 EVEN SHOWERPROOF S S T T FI FI E Sandy Springs R W Atlanta, ACA, is a private Please call today: MONNPOOLW Suite 350 404-935-0887 EVEN SHOWERPROOF**** † others. “While we are fasting, we feel EORE 2140 Peachtree Road NW ® PEOM for a Complimentary Lyric Consultation Bring someone whose voice 2140 Peachtree Road NW practice established in 1983 † Atlanta, Georgia 30309 E 6018 Sandy Springs Circle L compassion and sympathy for the less P O E Test Drive for 14 Days! P Atlanta, Georgia 30309 †† There’s no obligation to buy Lyric after you try it Suite 350 NowHearing Fitting Newest Lyric Technology! Buckhead fortunate,” Awad said. “It makes us by Drs. Helena 30328 Solodar and no obligation to buy Lyric after you try it –Test so there’s no riskfor to seeing how manySandy ways Lyric Springs can change your life. isThere’s familiar toto you. Drive 14 Days! and Screening. 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Withtoday: over thirty years or fast-breaking dinners, where all and Screening. 404-935-0887 Please call Sandy Springs COMMUNITY FOR 30 YEARS! Bring someone whose voice Helena are welcome, Muslim or not. “It is a Solodar, Au.D. Kadyn Williams, Au.D. 404-935-0344 2140 Peachtree Road (770) 229-6666 6018 Sandy Springs CircleNW of experience, we specialize in Solodar Kadyn Williams Atlanta, Georgia 30309 Bring someone whose voice Helena Au.D. Lic-A Au.D.consultation Lic-A Don’t wait. ScheduleFOR your Lyric6018 consultation today. month of charity when the Muslim 30 YEARS! Don’t wait. Schedule your Lyric today. Sandy Springs Circle www.audioconsult.com adult geriatric diagnostics, is familiar toNewest you. BUCKHEAD SANDY SPRINGS ROSWELL Buckhead MARIETTA and DULUTH Sandy Springs Helena Helena Solodar Solodar Kadyn Kadyn Williams Williams Williams Suite 350 Lyric, Distributed by Phonak, LLC ©2014. All rightsTechnology! 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GEORGIA DOT
Here is an early Georgia Department of Transportation rendering of how the intersection of Ga. 400 and I-285 might look, viewed from I-285, after extensive reconstruction expected to cost nearly $1 billion.
Upcoming ‘top-end’ projects could create traffic troubles BY JOE EARLE AND PAT FOX The numbers seem a bit overwhelming: 6 miles of roadway, perhaps four levels of bridges, nearly $1 billion in construction costs. But the problem is huge. More than 416,000 drivers pass through – at times, make that inch through – the intersection of Ga. 400 and I-285 every day. To try to ease the resulting congestion, state transportation officials are considering spending three or so years remaking the stretch of I-285 beginning just east of Ashford Dunwoody Road and ending just west of Roswell Road and the segment of Ga. 400 running from south of the Glenridge Connector to Hammond Drive. Meanwhile, just down the manylaned road, Cobb County officials are considering how to handle the 20,000 more cars expected to head to the Cumberland Mall area when the Atlanta Braves relocate to their new suburban stadium in 2017. Put simple, construction on the
stretch of I-285 running through or near Reporter Newspapers communities -Sandy Springs, Dunwoody, Brookhaven and Buckhead -- will soon be ramping up. Regular I-285 drivers know that will translate in the short term to a brightly flashing sign saying simply: Delays ahead. But former Sandy Springs City Councilman Chip Collins, for one, figures it’s worth it. “In the short term, it will cause some issues, but there’re already issues,” he said. “Sometime to make things better, they’ve got to get worse for a while.” And the intersection of Ga. 400 and I-285 has got to get better, he says. “I agree with Gov. [Nathan} Deal when he says it’s the most important project in metro Atlanta,” Collin said. “The intersection is one of the least effective in the number of cars it has to take. I don’t even get near I-285 and Ga. 400 at certain times of day. ... We’ve got to make this interchange work.” As for the Braves, Collins says he’s
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This rendering of the planned new Braves stadium in Cobb County shows the interstate highways connecting it to the city of Atlanta. Some Braves games are expected to add 20,000 cars to traffic in the area. |
JUNE 27 – JULY 10, 2014 | www.ReporterNewspapers.net
COMMUNITY happy living within a few miles of the planned new stadium. “As a Braves fan, I love the fact that the stadium will be about three miles as the crow flies from my home,” he said. “If traffic’s real bad, I can always ride my bike to the game.” Not everyone is quite so welcoming. Sandy Springs Mayor Rusty Paul said his initial reaction upon hearing about the new Braves stadium was shock. “And then when I realized where it was – horror,” he said. “While it’s a Cobb County project, when you look at where the season ticket holders are, Sandy Springs is going to be the front door to this thing.” Sandy Springs is familiar with Cobb County traffic. The route along Johnson Ferry Road west to Roswell Road into Atlanta sees close to 45,000 vehicles a day, many of them from Cobb County. Paul said he’s excited to have the Braves nearby, and he expects the complex will be a long-term plus for the region. Still, the traffic challenges to those cities in the path of the front gates could be debilitating. The I-75/I-285 interchange, the nearest connection of interstates to the planned new stadium, is already one of the most congested in metro Atlanta, with rush-hour backups a daily occurrence. Adding Braves traffic to that mix, Paul said, will force people to seek alternate routes such as Roswell Road through Sandy Springs. Paul believes Cobb County officials
and Braves officials have downplayed the traffic issue, saying a host of multimillion-dollar projects are under way to ease traffic flow through the corridor. The county, for instance, recently announced a $41 million plan to widen Windy Hill Road and install a new interchange with I-75, widen a portion of Cobb Parkway to six lanes, and add managed lanes to I-75 north. Adjustments to nearby streets and exits are also being considered. And Paul isn’t alone in questioning the road plan for the stadium. In a review of the Development of Regional Impact study for the project, the Georgia Regional Transportation Authority called for better pedestrian access to the stadium in addition to traffic improvements. GRTA approved the stadium transportation plan subject to a long list of conditions calling for improvements to Cobb Parkway, Cumberland Boulevard, Windy Hill Road and Powers Ferry Road. Laura Bell, developmental regional impact manager for GRTA, said the transportation analysis looked chiefly at the Cumberland area. “We’re not trying to track every trip,” Bell said. “We’re just trying to track the majority where we can figure out where regional impact would occur.” Because the traffic surge for night baseball games will coincide with the evening driving peak, it will affect traffic throughout the “top end” of the Perim-
Location along I-285
Total daily traffic in all four directions
I-85 N interchange (Spag Jct) 421,043 vehicles GA 400/I-285
416,000
I-75 N (Cobb cloverleaf)
411,960
I-20 E (east side)
294,721
I-20 W (west side)
291,914
I-85 S (southside)
274,198
I-75 S (southside)
249,955
I-675
190,491 Source: GDOT
eter, predicts Bob Dallas, a Dunwoody resident and former director of the Governor’s Office of Highway Safety. State and local governments should figure out how to get more dollars into the system to fund transportation -- not just roadways, but also transit, he said. “Our region wants to continue to grow,” Dallas said. “We have not kept up with our growth.” Or the traffic. Georgia DOT’s proposed improvements to the Ga. 400/I285 intersection include adding collector lanes, improving ramps connecting the two roads and widening or rebuilding several bridges. “Specific inter-
change footprint will be determined as the interchange concepts are finalized,” GDOT spokeswoman Nathalie Dale said in an email. Construction is expected to begin in 2016 and last about three years, Dale said. Once the work begins, lawyer Sally Wyeth will have a close-up view from her office near the Glenridge Connector. She commutes into Sandy Springs every day, so she’s not looking forward to the problems she expects will be created by the construction. Still, she’s optimistic about the outcome. “I think we can live through it,” she said.
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EDUCATION
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Student Profile:
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Friends and family describe Sarafina Chitika as determined, independent and loyal. She is “one of the top students I have ever taught,” Corinne Dedini, Academic Dean at Atlanta Girls’ School, said. “Her focus, work ethic and efficiency are only surpassed by her insatiable desire to understand the way the world works. Because of Sarafina’s intellectual capacity and intrinsic motivation, the world is her oyster.” Sarafina is involved in many activities both in and out of school. “I like to put my all into about a million different things: whether I am singing, doing gymnastics, running track, or at school, I am constantly trying to push myself to work harder and achieve more than I think is possible,” Sarafina said. Not only is she involved in extracurricular activities, Sarafina dedicates 14 to 18 hours per week to studying, which has allowed her to maintain her 4.0 GPA and ace her AP exams. Last summer, she had the opportunity to travel to Ecuador with a few of her friends. While there, Sarafina worked at a childcare center for children who lived in and around the Zambiza dump in Quito. “It was an amazing experience,” she said. “I was so lucky to get to spend my first time abroad doing meaningful work and making an impact with some of my closest friends.” Competitive gymnastics has been part of Sarafina’s life for nine years. She says it taught her to perform under pressure, how to be a fierce competitor, and
how to be a supportive teammate. Last fall she decided to take a break from gymnastics so she could experience other things high school had to offer. She joined the track and field team, competing in the 300-meter hurdles and placed second at region, qualifying her for the state meet. Over the past couple of years Sarafina proved to be a prominent leader at AGS. “I have become really comfortable in my role as leader. It is hugely important to me to be able to form my own opinions and make the decisions that are right for me,” she explained. Among the highlights of high school for Sarafina are the friends she has made. “Friends like mine are pretty hard to come by, and I know at the end of the day that I would do pretty much anything for them and vice versa,” she said.
What’s Next: Sarafina will be attending Harvard University in the fall. She plans to major in economics and applied mathematics. This article was reported and written by Sierra Middleton, a student at Mount Vernon Presbyterian School.
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EDUCATION Student Profile: Nikunj Jinan Riverwood International Charter School, Class of 2014 Nikunj Jinan was born in India and moved to the United States with his parents when he was 5. Upon entering high school, he says he observed the social isolation that occurs between groups of students. “I was shocked that in all my freshman classes, students automatically segregated themselves – the Caucasian kids sat on one side of the class while the Hispanic and black kids sat on the other,” Nikunj said. That provided the inspiration to create the after school program “Kids Teach It Forward,” for underprivileged and underperforming students at Mimosa Elementary School in Roswell.
Because of his work, Nikunj was awarded a certificate of accomplishment in the Princeton Prize in Race Relations. Alison Earles, a member of the Princeton Prize Committee, described Nikunj as “visionary, a leader, courageous.” Sheri Smith, Nikunj’s IB Business and Management teacher, recalled him
as “diligent, hardworking, dedicated and helpful.” Nikunj says he created this program because he “wanted to help students better their scores... and their opportunity.” But, just like its founder’s dexterity, “Kids Teach It Forward” does a lot more than just work to raise students’ standardized test scores. The program also helps build stronger bonds between racially diverse students, and promotes a greater understanding of different cultures by pairing tutors with pupils of different ethnicity. “He was motivated as he saw a racial divide in his class,” Earles said. Princeton University awards the Princeton Prize in Race Relations annually “to promote harmony, understanding, and respect among people of different races, by identifying and recognizing high school age students whose efforts have had a significant, positive effect on
race relations in their schools or communities,” according to its website. Smith says she was proud, but not surprised, to learn of his achievement. “He always contributed to class discussions in a way that you could tell that he went home and reflected … and came back with additional support.” To learn more about Nikunj’s program, visit www.kidsteachitforward.org.
What’s Next: Nikunj will attend Purdue University this fall to study computer science and statistics. He hopes to be involved with “Kids Teach It Forward” while in college, and to see its expansion to other schools, stating that he is “pleased and blessed with the opportunity.” This article was reported and written by Elizabeth Lamar, a student at Riverwood International Charter School.
FIREWORKS July 5th 7:30 PM Concourse Corporate Center Lawn 5 Concourse Parkway Cost: Free Fireworks will illuminate the skies above the King and Queen buildings in Sandy Springs as the community comes together in celebration of our nation’s independence. Music from the band, Shiloh, will begin at 7:30 p.m. Fireworks will dazzle the skies beginning at 9:45 p.m. Pack a picnic, bring a blanket, and enjoy an evening under the stars. The Sandy Springs Stars and Stripes Celebration is sponsored by Regent Partners (Concourse Corporate Center) and the City of Sandy Springs. Pets, tents, outdoor cooking, alcohol and personal-use sparklers will not be permitted.
SS
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JUNE 27 – JULY 10, 2014 | 25
Here’s Looking at You!
To view photos from your community visit www.ReporterNewspapers.net. To submit your photos email photos@reporternewspapers.net
PHOTOS BY PHIL MOSIER
Goal!!!! Above, Soccerfest, an all-day World Cup viewing party, was held at Brookhaven Park on June 22. Above, right, Sofia Smyth, 3, plays with a Brazucalike ball. Right, the event featured food trucks, largescreen viewing areas to watch the U.S. team battle Portugal, and soccer clinics for kids.
JOE EARLE
What to eat? Kristen DeVos of Dunwoody and Jacob Clawson of Jacksonville, Fla., discuss what to choose from food trucks gathered at Brook Run Park on June 19 for Food Truck Thursday.
PHOTOS BY PHIL MOSIER
26
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PHOTOS BY PHIL MOSIER
A good story
Just voices
The Atlanta History Center in Buckhead hosted “Juneteenth: The First Day of Freedom,” commemorating the 150th anniversary of the Civil War, and the 50th anniversary of the Civil Rights Act, on June 21-22. Above, storyteller Akbar Imhotep entertains the audience. Left, Jordyn Vaxter enjoys Imhotep’s performance.
The Atlanta Sacred Harp Singers, who do not use musical instruments, but just four notes and their voices, performed at the Ebenezer Primitive Baptist Church in Dunwoody on June 22. Above, Matt DeLong leads the singers. Right, Laura DeLong takes her turn leading. Sacred Harp singing is a 200-year-old American style of hymn singing, utilizing four-part harmonies, with participants seated facing inward in an open square.
JUNE 27 – JULY 10, 2014 | www.ReporterNewspapers.net
SS
COMMUNITY
Fish for dinner? Above, left, Lenox Brotherton, 6, and his father Jerry, get some fishing tips from National Park Service Ranger John Huth, sitting, during a Kids’ Fishing Day event at Island Ford on June 21. Clockwise, above, right, Gabriel Hise, 4, uses a red fishing rod to lure a catch as his grandmother, Paula Hise, looks on. Right, eager anglers could reel in bluegill, bass, breem or catfish. The fishing took place in a pond that feeds into the Chattahoochee River. Right, below, Park Ranger John Huth shows off a bluegill. Bottom, Steve Jones, left, with his children Marley, 8, and Harper, 5, join Lenox Brotherton, 6, center, Gabriel Hise, 4, and his grandmother. Left, the park supplied cane poles for the youngsters, but they could use something a little fancier to hook a fish, as Gabriel did.
SS
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JUNE 27 – JULY 10, 2014 | 27
PUBLIC SAFETY
Police Blotter
Ga. 400/Abernathy Road 30328 – On June 19 the victim told police that at 4:20 a.m., he was south on Ga. 400 at Abernathy Road when he saw a man trying to wave people down. The man said he had compassion for this man and pulled over and picked him up. The man told him that he needed to go to Cobb Parkway. The man then pulled a gun described as a Glock and pointed it at the victim. He ordered the man to pull over, where he took his wallet and his 1997 Mercury Grand Marquis, and drove away.
The following incidents and arrests are some but not all of the reports filed with SSPD over the listed period, dated through June 20. The following information was provided by the Sandy Springs Police Department from its records and is presumed to be accurate.
ROBBERY
CAPTAIN STEVE ROSE, SSPD srose@sandyspringsga.gov
The victim was parked in the Kroger lot,
not far from the gas pumps. As she walked in the parking lot, a woman came up and grabbed her purse. The victim resisted and was pulled to the ground as they struggled for the purse. The suspect left in a white Honda with a NJ tag which the victim was able to obtain. The purse was later found near St. Joseph’s Hospital.
1000 block of Hammond Drive 30328 – On June 14 a woman reported that she was physically assaulted and robbed by a man who she knows. The woman works at the location. Later in the day, the man returned, pushed her, and took her wallet. He then ran, according to her, to the nearest MARTA station. MARTA Police were notified as was Dunwoody Police, but the man was not spotted. 6000 block of Barfield Road 30328 – On June 14, around 8:30 p.m., officers were called to an apartment to meet with a man who said he was robbed at gunpoint. The officer noted that upon entering the apart-
ment, he could smell burnt marijuana. The man said someone knocked on the door asking for someone named “D.” The man opened the door. One of the three who were outside pulled a gun. They went through the apartment looking for things. They left. The victim, instead of calling 911, went looking for the suspects. He checked the area for about three hours. He told the officers he called 911 but was on hold for 30 minutes. A check of the log showed that this was not the case. The victim said the following was missing: a laptop, iPhone, $100 cash, PS3 game system, a belt with the initial “H” on the buckle, and a Michael Kors Watch. 4500 block of Roswell Road 30342 – On June 15 employees reported that just after 4 a.m., a man, dressed to conceal his identity, broke through a glass window, via a brick, and pulled a gun on the employees. He robbed them of an undisclosed, but not significant, amount of cash. The man’s voice “sounded familiar,” like a former employee whom they knew.
BUR G LARY 7200 block of Peachtree Dunwoody Road 30328 – On June 9 someone broke into the storage room for the Dunwoody Ridge Apartments. Several items were taken.
6300 block of Powers Ferry Road 30327 – On June 10 officers received an alarm call just after 3:30 a.m. They found the front door glass broken and a rock in the parking lot. Several bottles of liquor were taken. The loss is somewhere just under $2,000. 900 block of Abernathy Road 30328 – On June 10 a storage facility was forced open and the owner’s expensive clothing was taken. 8100 block of Roswell Road 30350 – On June 10 a storefront window was shattered by a rock which activated an alarm. The officers found no one inside the building. The complainant arrived and said that it appeared nothing was taken. The laptops in the building were secured and not taken.
8100 block of Roswell Road 30350 – On 900 block of Persimmon Point 30328 – June 10 someOn June 9 someone one threw a rock forced a front door through a glass door to the home and enRead more of the and entered the tered. Missing is a 50Police Blotter online at building sometime inch plasma TV, 32www.reporternewspapers.net between 9:15 p.m. inch Toshiba TV and a and the next mornSony TV. ing. A laptop was taken. 8700 block of Roswell Road 30350 – On June 9 sometime between 10 a.m. and 8100 block of Roswell Road 30350 – On 3 p.m., someone entered the apartment June 11 sometime between 5:45 p.m. and through a sliding door. A TV, sunglasses, 10 a.m., someone forced entry into the busiwatch, speakers and an Xbox game system ness, taking a Keurig coffee maker, Mac notewere missing. book, Apple 27-inch monitor, Motu recording device, Motu pre-recording device and bat 300 block of Sandalwood Lane 30350 – teries. More items may be missing. The comOn June 10 a man reported that he was gone pany has an alarm but didn’t set it because from June 5 to June 10 and on return, found of the number of false alarms they have had. that someone had broken into his apartment and also had stolen his car. The car was found 6600 block of Roswell Road 30328 – On abandoned in Fulton County. June 14 the owner of the Kiton Boutique found the front door glass shattered but said it did not appear that anything was missing. 6700 block of Roswell Road 30328 – A glass door was found broken by a rock. Nothing appears to have been taken, although a file drawer had been gone through. 2000 block of Treelodge Parkway 30350 – On June 14 a woman said that someone removed six to eight pairs of shoes. She said she found a back window slightly opened and believes that someone came in and took the shoes.
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Landfall Road 30350 – On June 14, just be
THEFT A man on Summer Drive said that on
June 7, he opened his back patio door, using his door key, and left the key in the door. Around 11 p.m., he heard someone “leaning on my fence,” and when he went to investigate, he discovered the keys were gone from the door.
6300 block of Peachtree Dunwoody Road – A man reported on June 8 that his iPad was stolen from his shopping cart while he was shopping. He doesn’t know how it was taken or who took it. The “Find My iPad” app showed it to be in the area of Vicksburg Place (Roberts Drive.) Officers checked several apartments there but no answers.
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5900 block of Roswell Road 30328 – On June 10 the kitchen manager reported that around 2 p.m. a man ran up a lunch tab of $49 and then headed to his car without paying. The manager followed and asked the man if he was going to pay. He said he was and that he was just getting a cigarette. The man started the car up and drove away, all while the manger was knocking on his winSS
PUBLIC SAFETY dow. The tag was obtained and registered to a white Ford Escape, at a home on Williamson Drive. The manager described the man. The cops went to the home but the car was not there and no one answered. The information on the registered owner showed an FTA from Sandy Springs, for a suspended license with no insurance. 200 block of Johnson Ferry Road 30328 – On June 10 a 34-year-old man called police and reported that he met with a female friend at the Goodwill store around 5 p.m. on June 7. While she was sitting in her car, he showed her his Pioneer CD player and a Visa gift card, both valued at $200. He told the officer that he was proud of the items he bought and gave them to her to hold. She held them—and then drove away. The victim tried several times to call and text her but she did not answer. He said she works at a local eatery. 6100 block of Peachtree Dunwoody Road 30328 – On June 11, around 9 p.m., a man came into the hotel and stole an Apple laptop used by guests. He sat at the computer for a while, and then returned three or four minutes later with a large bag like the ones the pizza guy uses for delivery, and took the computer. He walked out toward Hammond Drive. 1500 block of Huntcliff Village Drive 30350 – On June 15 a woman said that she
placed her kayak and accessories on her boyfriend’s apartment porch. They were gone for a day and upon return, found the items had been stolen.
200 block of Hilderbrand Drive 30328 – On June 16 a woman said she was at Café 290 and just after midnight, someone stole her Coach purse. She suspects a server whom the officer spoke with and who denied taking it. 5600 block of Roswell Road 30342 – On June 16 the owner of the restaurant reported that one of his employees has been stealing money from the cash register. That case is under review. 8100 block of Colquitt Road 30350 – On June 17 a 1991 Acura NSX was reported stolen. 900 block of Johnson Ferry Road 30342 – On June 17 officers were called to a medical facility and told that a woman apparently accessed the employee area of the office and took a wallet from a purse without anyone noticing. The victim later found that $3,500 had been charged on the card at Macy’s, Best Buy and other businesses nearby.
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6600 block of Roswell Road 30328 – On June 17 the victim said that between 9 and 10 a.m. he had items taken from his locked locker at LA Fitness. His Citibank Visa card was missing. He immediately canceled the card and to his knowledge, no activity was found. 6600 block of Roswell Road 30328 – On June 18 a man reported someone took his Dodge Ram truck key from his unlocked locker. His wallet and contents were stolen, and his debit card was soon used at Target in Norcross.
from her. So…. she hit him on the head with a vase, a shelf, and anything else she could find. She finally left on foot. 6000 block of Roswell Road 30328 – On June 9, around 3 a.m., officers were called to the Taboo 2 Club on a disturbance. They spoke with security who said a woman was assaulted by another woman inside the club. The fight was broken up by bouncers who said the two left separately. One had a bruised elbow.
5200 block of Spalding Drive 30328 – On June 16 a wom-
1st block of Concourse Parkway 30328 – On June 18 a man
said that he and his lady friend checked into the Westin Hotel. He told the officer that around 2:30 a.m., he was changing clothes and $5,000 fell from his pants pockets to the floor. He saw this but did not pick it up. He left his lady friend in the room while he left to run an errand. He texted her at 3:30 a.m. asking if the money was still on the floor. She said yes, along with her $900 shoes. The next day they checked out of the room around 2:30 pm. He told the officer that he realized that he left the $5,000 on the hotel room floor. He returned to the hotel at 10 p.m. but the hotel manager was gone until the next day. Bottom line is the money is gone. They have safes in the rooms but one was not used. The hotel interviewed the staff and key-access info is available to the police investigation.
1600 block of Dunwoody Club Drive 30350 – On June 18 the staff reported that a man driving a black Jeep Cherokee told them he was there to pick up a leaf blower and sod. He did so, and left with a Stihl backpack blower. It was after he left that they realized there was no order to pick it up, and in fact he had stolen it.
5600 block of Peachtree Dunwoody Road 30342 – On June 18 a patient at St. Joseph’s Hospital said at some point when he was out of the room, someone took his cellphone from the bedside desk drawer.
AS S AULT 700 block of Hammond Drive 30328 – On June 8 a man said that he met a woman at Meehan’s and they later went to his residence. The next morning she asked for a ride back to College Park and he said he would not but would give her funds for the MARTA ride. She screamed, yelled and then tried to grab his gun on his night stand, but he got it away
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an reported that she and her livein girlfriend got into an argument that escalated to the point that the victim was hit in the head with a ceramic dog bowl. Officers, after speaking to both parties and the dog, arrested the girlfriend on simple assault /domestic violence. The victim received a scratch on the head.
AR R ES TS 700 block of Huntcliff Village Court 30350 – On June 7 officers responded to a fight call just after midnight. The caller said one person had a gun. When they arrived, everyone scattered. They rounded up one person who ran from the police. He was charged with disorderly conduct. 200 block of Northwood Drive 30342 – On June 7 police responded to a fight call just after 1 a.m. No arrests. The participants, all of whom had minor injuries, said they were not fighting. 5900 block of Peachtree Dunwoody Road 30342 – On June 7, following a traffic stop,
the driver was found in possession of about 35 grams of marijuana, a scale, a “QuickIt” can, with a false compartment commonly used to store drugs, black ski mask, gloves, several hundred dollars and a .40 caliber Glock. He was arrested for possession with intent to distribute.
6300 block of Peachtree Dunwoody Road 30328 – On June 7 store security watched
a woman take a pair of “Executive Beats” headphones, conceal them in her purse, and then try to leave the store without paying. She was detained and later arrested. She told the officer she had done five years in prison for identity theft. 8800 block of Long Beach Circle 30350 – On June 7, around 11:30 a.m., cops responded to a fight call. They met with a man who
said he hit the other guy because he was a “meth head.” A witness said the victim, who was bleeding from the head, was hit with a machete. The suspect denied it, saying that he hit the victim with something else. The suspect was eventually arrested. 5600 Roswell Road 30342 – On June 7 store security staff watched as four persons parked their cars just outside the doors of the store. They entered and started filling up shopping carts quickly and without regard to the prices. The staff knew there was a good chance these folks were going to load the baskets then bum rush the front door, load the cars, and make a quick getaway. They called the cops who were waiting outside then the suspects did indeed head for the cars with over $700 in merchandise they had no intention of paying for. The four were arrested for felony shoplifting. 500 block of Northridge Road 30350 – On June 7, around 1:30 p.m., officers were called to a burglary in progress. They found two people outside an apartment. The pair was secured and asked what was going on. One said she took a cab ride earlier and left her wallet in the cab. She said she did some research on the driver and found a video of him using what she believed to be her credit cards. She did an online search of the company which led her to the apartment in question, occupied by a married couple, none of whom bore the name of the suspect cabbie she was looking for, nor had any history of owning a cab. The two were charged with disorderly conduct. 4000 block of Treelodge Parkway 30350 – On June 8 a man reported that around 5 a.m. his girlfriend, who had been to a club, was intoxicated, and had to be helped to the apartment by a friend. Once inside, she became angry and ripped his “do-rag” off his head and then dropped a crock pot on the floor, breaking it. She became enraged, and threw pieces of the crock pot at him as well as bottled water. He left to sleep in the car but forgot his keys so upon return to the apartment, he found that he was locked out. She refused to open the door so he kicked it down. The officers found her intoxicated and in the bathroom. While talking to the cops, the woman hit the wall with her fist and was arrested. The report said while she was in the back of the patrol car, she banged her head on the bars and partition. 6300 block of Peachtree Dunwoody Road 30328 – On June 10 store security nabbed a
man who stole two bottles of Dom Perignon Champagne, $140 each, and two v-neck TCONTINUED ON PAGE 30
SANDY SPRINGS NOTICE OF ZONING MODIFICATION Petition Number:
201401133
Petitioner:
Masoud Zahedi
Gordon Church (404) 937-6222
Property Location:
305 Carpenter Drive
2498 Jett Ferry Road, Suite 102 Dunwoody, GA 30338 gordonchurch@allstate.com
Present Zoning:
A-L (Apartment Limited Dwelling District)
Request:
To delete all conditions related to senior living in Sandy Springs zoning case RZ08-012
Public Hearings:
Mayor and City Council July 15, 2014
Location:
Sandy Springs City Hall Morgan Falls Office Park 7840 Roswell Road Building 500 Sandy Springs, Georgia 30350 770-730-5600
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JUNE 27 – JULY 10, 2014 | 29
PUBLIC SAFETY
Sandy Springs Police Blotter CONTINUED FROM PAGE 29 shirts. He was arrested. 8700 block of Roswell Road 30350 – On June 10 a man was detained after taking some King Oscar sardines, berry lip balm and Dove shave balm. Cops were called to a residence and spoke to a man who said his partner was intoxicated and arguing with him all night. The man was using a knife to cut up stuffed animals and was mistreating the couple’s dogs. When the cops got there, they talked to the other guy who said he had paid for his partner to have breast implants and he was being disrespectful to him. He continued to be disorderly in the presence of the officers and refused to calm down. He was later arrested for disorderly conduct. 1100 block of Hammond Drive 30328 – On June 11 SunTrust staff said a woman was in line and attempting to cash a forged check. They called the owner of the check who said it was not from him and the account had previous fraud activity. Cops found the woman, and she told them the check was a personal check, but upon review, the check was a business check. She was arrested for forgery. 7900 block of Roswell Road 30350 – On June 14 the victim said he and his boyfriend/ roommate got into an argument and the boyfriend/roommate/now suspect, pulled a kitchen knife and threatened him. The suspect was later arrested. 5600 block of Roswell Rd 30342 – On June 14 a woman was spotted by security employees stealing $57 in items consisting of cellphone cases. She was later arrested. 6300 block of Peachtree Dunwoody Road
30328 – On June 14 store security nabbed a man for taking the following: beef tenderloin ($90), pork tenderloin ($80) and tuna ($32). The groceries were placed in a book bag and the man attempted to leave without paying. 8700 block of Roswell Road 30350 – On June 17 Publix store employees witnessed a woman stealing a bottle of wine. She was charged with shoplifting. Two men were arrested on June 18 around 8:30 p.m. after a traffic stop. The officer on the stop noticed the pickup truck had a large amount of metal in the bed. Due to the trend of copper and recycle goods thefts, he asked the driver and passenger about the metal. The stories were lame at best with frequent changing of the facts, and it became clear to the officer the men were lying. It is probable that the two were at 180 Allen Road, a demolition site, stealing copper and metal. The two were later arrested. 6000 block of Boylston Road 30328 – On June 19 a 32-year-old woman reported that her live-in girlfriend assaulted her while the pair was in bed because the victim would not talk to the girlfriend’s mother on the phone. The victim said she was hit as well as bitten by the suspect. Warrants were taken for the arrest of the suspect.
OTH ER TH I N GS 5500 block of Roswell Road 30342 – On June 8 a resident reported seeing a man looking in through balcony doors just before 10 p.m. A man called the police and told them he was being attacked by several people who live in Africa. They used Voodoo to attack him and read his mind. They often see what
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he sees and tells him things to do, and they always talk to him in his head. He went on to say they do this to other people with the goal of stealing financial information.
A man reported that while driving west on
Cops were called to Hilderbrand and
she was shopping in Atlanta last Labor Day, she met a man who asked for her phone number. She gave it to him and (the report says) she kept asking him how old he was. The woman said the man continues to call although she made it clear that she doesn’t want to go out with him. He calls and then yells at her, wanting to go out.
spoke with a man who said he was at Café 290 dancing and having a good time with a woman. When the bar closed, around 2 a.m., he told the woman he would pay her $100 for sex. The woman said no but would engage in oral sex for that amount. Somewhere along the line, the man found out the woman was another man, so he said he wanted his money back. The person formerly known as a woman acknowledged the agreement of oral sex for money, but said this was not prostitution but merely an “incentive.” Both were charged with solicitation of an illicit sexual act.
SSPD officers were called by Alpharet-
ta PD officers who were earlier called to North Fulton Hospital regarding a woman who said she was robbed. The woman was naked and told officers she was a witch and was in the woods praying for a princess. She was in the fifth house but someone from the fourth house came over with a shotgun and body bag. She said she was not sure how she got there but had given some of her clothing to a man who was bleeding. She told officers that she had been smoking marijuana and mushrooms. Alpharetta cops found her on the side of the road and on talking with her, determined she came from around the Roberts Drive area. She said she had been walking for 12 days, trying to get to Mexico so she could smoke and drink all she wanted. She was admitted to the hospital with no criminal charges pending.
To Advertise call 404-917-2200 ext 110
HELP WANTED
SERVICES AVAILABLE
CLEANING SERVICES
Full time/Part time Cashier needed – Sunshine Car Wash and Detail - $8.50 per hour. Please contact 404245-9537 or apply in person: 1244 Dunwoody Village Parkway.
Driveways & Walkways – Replaced or repaired. Masonry, grading, foundations repaired, waterproofing and retaining walls. Call Joe Sullivan 770-616-0576.
Love to clean houses! – Call 706-415-2949. Great prices.
CEMETERY PLOTS Arlington Memorial Park – 2 adjoining spaces in Lot 14-D, Pinecrest section. Lake view. Current retail $8995 each. Asking $2995 each. Call David at 281-485-3548.
PETS Certified Dog Trainer – Positive, Gentle methods. Private Training at your home. www.mygoodrascal.com (770) 401-7945. List your business or service under this category – prices start at $39.00.
YARD SALE Flea Market & Bake Sale – Methodist Children’s Home, 500 Columbia Dr. Decatur. July 11 and 12. 9AM – 4PM. Bargains galore – rain or shine.
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Matthew’s Handy Services – small jobs and chores are my specialty. Member of the Better Business Bureau. Shelving/organizers, towel bars, carpentry, drywall, painting, plumbing & minor yard work. Call 404-547-2079 or email mwarren8328@gmail.com. At Your Service – Home improvements, repairs, move-in/move-out assistance. Free estimates and References available. We also pickup and deliver items - call Handyman Services for a quote. No job too small OR to large. Cell: 803-608-0792 or 678-927-9336. Home-based Personal/Executive Asst Available – Office & Concierge Services, Admin Support, Internet Research, Social Media, Marketing Projects, Editing & Proofreading, Travel Consulting. T: 954.684.0174 E: vbcbusinessandconsulting@gmail.com. Real Property Tax Savings Over the Next 3 Years – Get $1,000 to $20,000 savings! I do the work, you keep your money. Jack Florek reduceyourpropertytaxatl@ gmail.com – 404-844-7131. Looking for a Caregiver to take care of your loved one – Call 678-665-2803 – will work days/nights.
JUNE 27 – JULY 10, 2014 | www.ReporterNewspapers.net
I-285, his car was hit by a green residential trash can that came out of nowhere.
A 25-year-old woman reported that while
4900 block of Roswell Road 30342 – On June 14 a 42-year-old man reported that he went into the Mail USA business with his mother and his two children. During the conversation, the owner of the business told her there would be an extra charge for additional packaging. She asked why, because UPS didn’t charge it. The owner got mad and came from around the counter with a yard stick ordering them out of the store. An employee of a gym reported that two women came in but neither had memberships. They were declined. Later, the man received a call from a man whose phone number was listed in California. He threatened to beat the man up in the parking lot. 1000 block of Brentwood Way 30350 – On June 18 a man reported that his neighbor pulled a gun on him and threatened to kill him. The officer went to the neighbor (suspect) and asked her if she pulled a gun. She told him she did and showed him a BB gun which looked real. She said she did this so he would be afraid of her because she had previous problems with him and was tired of it. She was later arrested and the gun placed in evidence.
PET SERVICES
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WINDOWS & SIDING Offering vinyl, wood and composite windows – All types of siding. Factory-trained installation. Familyowned, Family-priced. Angie’s List ‘A’ Rated. BBB ‘A+’. 33 Years In Business. Quinn Windows & Siding. 770-939-5634.
BOOKS Okay everyone, can Dessa do it? – Deadline coming: 8/20/14. Read more at www.poodessa.com.
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M I L L
G L E N
D U N W O O D Y
C L U B
F O R E S T
R E D F I E L D
Purveyors of Fine Homes in Dunwoody and Sandy Springs. al t en l R oo ew P N ith w
98% Sales to List Price
REALTY
(in 2013)
2394 Mt Vernon Road Suite 150
770.559.1555
SOLD in 8 Days!
4807 Blyth Ct. - $489,000
1862 Stapleton Ct. -$3,200/mo. Dunwoody Club Forest
Your Dream is a reality with Dunwoody Brokers!
ed t is 00 L 0 st 5, u 9 J 3 $
Coming Soon!
Dunwoody Club Forest - Entertainer’s dream
4453 Valley View Dr. - Updated...A Must See!
©2014 Dunwoody Brokers Realty. All information deemed reliable but not guaranteed. If your home is currently listed with another broker this is not intended to solicit that listing.
ed 0 t s Li ,00 t s 9 Ju 53 $
Contact Steve:
Steve@SteveHaas.com
4834 Parliament Way Maintained to Perfection!
404.966.8839
Visit our Website for market information:
www.DunwoodyBrokers.com
Pat Geheren | 678.587.9500 www.geherenlaw.com Dunwoody Brokers Realty
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770.559.1555
w w w. d u n w o o d y b r o k e r s . c o m SS