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Dunwoody Reporter
Perimeter Business
Voters Guide
Meet the candidates for mayor COMMUNITY 6-7
Revolutionary
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Students re-enact 1776 AROUND TOWN 20
OCT. 2 — OCT. 15, 2015 • VOL. 6 — NO. 20
It’s a set up!
PAGES 9-15
Plan for Dunwoody connector road predates city’s incorporation BY ELLEN ELDRIDGE
elleneldridge@reporternewspapers.net
PHIL MOSIER
Dunwoody High School varsity volleyball players Talley Davidson, left center, and Madison McKnight, far left, go up against Riverwood International Charter School teammates, Brooke McAfee, Nailah Jenkins, and Anna Ryan, far right, during a match on Sept. 17 in the Riverwood gymnasium. The Dunwoody Wildcats won the match over the Riverwood Raiders 2 games to 1. See more photos on page 25.
A plan for a road network in the Perimeter Center area that was dreamed up a decade ago finally is beginning to take shape. Dunwoody city officials say plans are underway to develop a $20 million connector road coming off I-285, going under Ashford-Dunwoody Road and connecting with Perimeter Center Parkway. The road is part of a network of connectors planned for the area as new, high-rise developments are being built. “We can sit on our hands and wish this wasn’t happening or we can look at reality and figure out ways to deal with it,” Mayor Mike Davis said. “This is one of the steps that we have found that we can actually make an improvement in the situation.” Davis said “the horse has left the barn” in terms of stopping growth in the area. Property owners won the right to build high rises and dense development in DeKalb County before Dunwoody became a city, he said, and the development is inevitable. Dunwoody has to have a vision to get SEE INFRASTRUCTURE, PAGE 26
ChatComm shows just how far 911 technology has come BY ELLEN ELDRIDGE
elleneldridge@reporternewspapers.net
When someone called for help a decade ago, the first question a 911 operator would ask a caller was, “What is your emergency?” Now, operators who work for ChatComm, the Sandy Springs-based 911 call center, ask, “Where is your emergency?” Cellphones, unlike older “land lines,” are not tied to any particular addresses, so the proliferation of mobile
communication devices has changed the way 911 operators gather information in order to dispatch police and firefighters to emergencies. “There are 400,000 people who travel Ga. 400 and I-285, and they are just passing by,” said Stephen Pierce, an operations specialist with the Chattahoochee River 911 Authority, which usually is known by its nickname,
Saturday, October 17 10 a.m. - 6 p.m.
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ChatComm. “They don’t really know where they are.” Neither, for the most part, do 911 operators. If you think you or a loved one is having a heart attack, grab a land line because the operator will see the address associated with the line, Pierce said. He recommends residents register cellphones with Smart 911.com, a public service that allows users to provide information online that would help first responders locate them and understand ongoing medical issues.
&
SEE CHATCOMM, PAGE 27
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Some home-based businesses upset over sanitation fees BY ELLEN ELDRIDGE
elleneldridge@reporternewspapers.net
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DeKalb County’s sanitation department lowered its fees for home-based business owners in March, but Dunwoody residents who work from home say they’re still paying too much. Adrienne Duncan said she noticed on her latest tax bill that DeKalb County sanitation assessed a $300 fee, which she said was lower than what she paid in 2014. “But they’re still higher than other single family residences due to the blue slip of paper over my desk,” Duncan said. “The additional charge was tantamount to a fine, simply for holding a business license.” DeKalb sanitation officials considered Duncan’s property “commercial” despite the residential zoning designation and automatically issues larger trash cans, Duncan said. “For all the extra trash not being produced,” she said. Another resident, Barry Kanne, said his in-home business doesn’t create excess trash that would warrant paying more in sanitation fees. “I can assure you that in our house
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we are well served with the current, once per week [trash pickup] schedule,” Kanne said. “Our business deals with writing medically-based journalism. Not much of a sanitation load there.” Kanne said he learned that earlier in the year DeKalb County government made an open records request for a listing of all Dunwoody Occupational Tax Certificate holders —business owners — who listed a residential address. “They were gathering data to charge an increased rate to those residential property owners who happened to comply with the Dunwoody law and had obtained a business license although they (sanitation officials) were not delivering any additional services for the increased fee,” Kanne said. Pauline Andrea, a spokesperson for DeKalb County, emailed Kanne to say the Sanitation Department could not change or waive the fees because they were approved by the Board of Commissioners in March. Andrea said the old fee for a homebased business added $135 to the $265 fee charged residents, making the total fee $400 a year. The additional fee was reduced to $35 when DeKalb went to once weekly trash pickups this summer, so the total fee for home-based businesses now is $300 a year. Commissioner Nancy Jester said she agrees the excess fees for homebased businesses that don’t generate excess waste are unecessary. She said about a handful of people expressed frustration with the fee and Jester said she knows that means more people who haven’t spoken up are upset. “It sounded silly for them to have to pay that for being an editor or computer programmer,” Jester said. Because the Board of Commissioners approved the $35 commercial sanitation fee for residential businesses in March, Jester said legislation would have to be written and approved by the BOC to change the fee structure. Jester said she plans to work on legislation to change the fee, but would have to consult legal experts. Some inhome businesses, such as woodworkers or caterers, would create more trash, so Jester said she wants to find a way to make the fees charged fair. Jester said she could have something to present to the BOC by October. Kanne said he wants a fair assessment from the county and not to have to pay a fee simply for having a business. “The reason I’m getting nailed with that charge is because I’m complying with the city’s business license requirement,” he said. DUN
COMMUNITY
ELLEN ELDRIDGE
Doug Hooker, executive director of the Atlanta Regional Commission, says the biggest change the Perimeter area must contend with is continued growth.
ARC director: Connectivity is key for Perimeter’s success BY ELLEN ELDRIDGE
elleneldridge@reporternewspapers.net
The executive director of the Atlanta Regional Commission says the growth of the Perimeter area shows the benefits of infrastructure planning and says the rest of the metro Atlanta area has to catch up or die. “If regions fail to adapt quickly enough, they can become irrelevant or actually extinct,” Doug Hooker told members of the Sandy Springs Rotary Club on Sept. 28. Hooker said the region must continue to innovate to stay relevant and efficient for its people, natural life and built structures. The way to do this, he said, is through collaboration. The biggest change the region must contend with is its continued growth, Hooker said. Attracting company headquarters such as those for MercedesBenz USA and State Farm shows the Perimeter’s strength in connectivity, with highways and MARTA, he said, but continued innovation happens best through collaboration. “The only way to meet these challenges is through cooperative action and collaboration,” Hooker said. “We have to work together across jurisdictions, business sectors, cultural divides and socioeconomic lines in order to win the future.” Hooker wants to choose a path to win the future, he said, by getting serious about improving education and the quality of the workforce, providing for affordable housing and coordinating growth as a unified region. Part of the reason Mercedes, State Farm and other leading companies want to invest in the Perimeter area is because of connectivity between major highways and MARTA, Hooker said. “Your economy is booming as a result of that,” he said. “With MARTA being here, your neighbors to the north, up Ga. 400, want a taste of what you are experiencing now, so they want MARTA to extend out to the north of Ful-
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ton County. They want what you have.” After a 2014 public opinion poll showed transportation to be the region’s biggest issue, the ARC made creating a “world-class infrastructure” a priority. But finding funding has become increasingly difficult, Hooker said, and he cautions not to expect more transportation money to come from the federal government. The ARC works toward better “livability,” Hooker said, which includes connectivity as much as an investment in education and affordable housing for all people. “We’re talking about real human lives,” he said. Hooker spoke about a woman who had to move to Smyrna after losing her apartment in Sandy Springs. She had to walk 19 miles a day to her job at Walmart, Hooker said. Developing and nurturing an innovation economy is crucial, Hooker said. Were the Atlanta region a country, it would be the 36th largest economy in the world, he said. “We are as a region as big as the states of Connecticut and Rhode Island combined,” Hooker said. “We are not a small, sleepy, Southern enterprise anymore.” Having some of the highest rates of income inequality in the region drains its economy, Hooker said. “The average household income in 2013 was about the same as it was in 1998,” He said. “Fifteen years, and essentially unchanged.” Hooker said too many places import talent and leave locals to low wage jobs. Through collaborative innovation, the communities in the region can continue Atlanta’s growth in a manageable way, he said. “Our region is at the precipice of tremendous change and opportunity,” Hooker said. “The choices before all of us are more important than ever. Our future is not written.”
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elleneldridge@reporternewspapers.net
After a public dispute with activists professor and a member of the DeKalb over police shootings, DeKalb CommisCounty Coalition for Justice and Police sioner Nancy Jester says she Accountability, said Jester’s wants to increase pay for the listening was the problem. county’s first responders. During the meeting, family The activists, meanwhile, members of people who were say they want DeKalb’s comkilled by DeKalb police offimissioners to call for a fedcers spoke about their losseral investigation of DeKalb es and, when asked for her police, create a citizens’ rereaction, Jester gave none, view board, and establish a Akinyela said. “She sat sto“family compassion and acically throughout the meetcountability protocol.” ing with her arms folded,” “I strongly feel DeKalb Akinyela said. Nancy Jester County will be a better and Jester said 90 percent of safer place if we move forthe people in the room were ward and expand our training – to both activists and she had been advised by offer protection to our officers and civillawyers not to attend the meeting at all, ians,” Jester wrote in a press release Sept. but that she did so out of respect. 23. “I was listening and trying to take it The release and call for more pubin, and listen and be respectful of evlic safety support comes a day after Jesteryone’s thoughts and emotions,” Jester said a local group of activists threater said. ened her and her family on social media. She wrote that the coalition “has atJester said she had appeared at a retempted to hijack the dialogue and excent meeting with the activist group to ploit grieving families in DeKalb Coun“show respect and listen.” But Makunty to advance their extreme, anti-police, gu Akinyela, a Georgia State University anti-taxpayer agenda.”
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DUN
FAITH
PHOTOS BY PHIL MOSIER
All creatures great and small All Saints Catholic Church held a “Blessing of the Animals” on Sept. 26. Above, Monseigneur Hugh Marren blesses Melvin, a labrador puppy, as twin sisters, Gracie Crofton, 10, far left, and Maddie, center, behind the dog, look on. Center, Mary Malinoff, 10, left, holds a hamster named Roller, as Shoela Ettampola, 7, center, Roller’s owner, the Monseigneur, and Maddie Crofton, 10, take a look. Right, the event was held in front of the church, out of the rain. Right, Mark Westrick,10, reads the blessing with a little help from the Monseigneur.
Looping systems now make sermons much easier to hear BY ELLEN ELDRIDGE
elleneldridge@reporternewspapers.net
An audiologist felt so strongly about the benefits of a new hearing technology system that she brought it to her synagogue. But she didn’t stop there. “My husband and I were very passionate to have this at our synagogue because it would make our services and classes more accessible to people wearing hearing aids,” Dr. Rita Chaiken said. Chaiken didn’t stop at getting a hearing loop installed at Congregation B’nai Torah in Sandy Springs. She invited local leaders to a demonstration to show others how well the system helps people hear. Now, Saint Luke’s Presbyterian Church in Dunwoody plans to have a hearing loop installed the week of Oct. 12. Nick Hobbs founded Active Life Hearing Loops, LLC, in 2012, after meeting Chaiken at a training meeting about hearing loops. Though Hobbs works as a systems engineer, he started installing hearing loops part time because he understood the importance of the technology, which he learned was more prevalent in Europe, he said. “My mother taught literature to deaf students,” Hobbs said. “In recent years, when I learned about this technology, I thought ‘Wow, this is a great way to inDUN
clude people.’” His business is now growing into more full-time work, he said. A church in Buckhead is also interested in hearing loop technology and Hobbs said he is putting together a proposal. Though the technology is fairly simple, it can get expensive to install. Chaiken said B’nai Torah decided to wait a few years from 2012 and install the loop as part of planned renovations in the synagogue. The loop was completed in 2014. Hearing loops are wires that circle a room and connect to a sound system. The loop transmits the sound electromagnetically. The electromagnetic signal is then picked up by the telecoil in a hearing aid or cochlear implant. Dr. Helena Solodar chairs the Georgia Commission for Hearing Impaired and Deaf Persons. She said the group wants to “loop Georgia” from its court systems that already have hearing loops to checkout lines in grocery stores. “Looping systems are an amazing and relatively inexpensive way to provide hearing access from a speaker system to an ear with very little trouble,” Solodar said. “Any sound coming out of the sound sys-
tem will be delivered dithe demonstration at B’nai rectly to the person’s ear, if Torah that he immediately they have a working telewent to his audiologist to coil.” have his telecoil activated. Sometime the audiolo“[During the demongist has to activate the softstration] my hearing aids ware for a patient, but the didn’t have the telecoils actechnology for telecoils has tivated, so we both were been around more than 60 given small hand-held reyears, she said. ceivers and conventionDave McKenney has al earbuds,” McKenney been a trustee and member said, “and were impressed of Saint Luke’s since it was at how clearly sound was founded in 1969. He and transmitted into our ears, Roby Price, the church’s without the background SPECIAL echo of their hall.” facilities manager, acceptPlaces of worship are ed Chaiken’s invitation to Rev. Shannon Dill, with installing technology the hearing loop demonSaint Luke’s, said the hearto aid hearing. stration. ing loop is the best techPrice said he had been nology available for helplooking for solutions to help people ing hearing impaired folks. She said many hear better in the church’s sanctuary, members of the congregation — both where the acoustics were designed more older and young — rely on hearing assisfor music than for speakers. The church tance devices, but still have trouble hearplans to spend $8,000 in donated moning speakers in the sanctuary. ey to pay for the double loop installa“We have worked over the years to tion. Hobbs will run the wires around make physical enhancements to our facilthe sanctuary and between the rows of ity, but none of them have made the difpews, taping the wire to the floor. Then ference in terms of clarity and reach that carpet will be installed over the existing the hearing loop will provide,” Dill said. brick, which has been the floor for 28 “With the loop, you can be seated anyyears, Price said. where in our sanctuary and be able to McKenney said he was so excited by hear.” www.ReporterNewspapers.net |
OCT. 2 – OCT. 15, 2015 | 5
COMMUNITY
Mayor, city council candidates share plans for Dunwoody Dunwoody voters head to the polls Nov. 3 to choose a mayor and a city council member. Mayor Mike Davis faces three challengers in his bid to win re-election. One is former City Councilman and Mayor Pro Tem Denis Shortal, who resigned his seat on council to run for the mayor’s post. The others are commercial lender Chris Grivakis and retired BellSouth employee and actor Steve Chipka. The Dunwoody Reporter asked each of the candidates a series of questions about their qualifications for the job and plans for the city. Here are their answers. For more about the campaign, go to ReporterNewspapers.net.
Stephen Chipka
Retired BellSouth employee Why do you want to be mayor? I am fed up with the current group of City Council members and their lack of transparency to the citizens of the city of Dunwoody. Why should the voters choose
you? Voters should choose me because they are fed up with the current regime that does not listen to constituents.
What do you see as the most significant issue facing the city right now? How will you address that issue? The most significant issue facing the citizens of the city of Dunwoody is a City Council oblivious to their input. I will address that issue with public forums in various parts of the city at times convenient for residents of the city. What’s one thing about Dunwoody you think should change? One thing that needs to change about Dunwoody is the involvement of the taxpaying residents in city decisions. How do you see Dunwoody in 10 years? Dunwoody in 10 years will not be significantly dif-
ferent without a major change in leadership. The current approach of planning from the hip will continue to drain city of Dunwoody resources until the city is caused to eliminate debt to achieve any public projects. The city has already mired itself in debt with the “PVC Farm” project which funds a private construction company with taxpayer funds. In the future, the city of Dunwoody should be free of debt and striving to achieve a “green” status for all new development,
Mike Davis
Mayor of Dunwoody since January 2012 Why do you want to be mayor? I love Dunwoody! I’ve raised my family here and been involved in countless civic organizations, primarily in leadership roles. I’ve had the opportunity to serve as the Mayor of Dunwoody for the past four years and I would love to continue to serve for the next four years. Dunwoody has a two term limit for the office of mayor, and I would like to continue to work to see Dunwoody be the best city it can be! I feel like I’m only half done with my job. Why should the voters choose you? My leadership style is one based on coalition building to accomplish our goals. I am committed to ensuring that all our council members are heard so we can
come up with the best solutions. I have a track record of honest and transparent government. I am fiscally conservative and work on a “needs” vs. “wants” basis when evaluating major city expenditures. We have previously established priorities (based upon plans with citizen input) such as paving and intersection fixes that should take precedence over costly and shortsighted special interests. I am best equipped to continue representing Dunwoody’s interest to DeKalb County, the state of Georgia and the surrounding areas. I have spent the past four years building relationships that have enabled Dunwoody to work well with other cities, the county and the state. What do you see as the most significant issue facing the city right now? How will you address that issue? We have two pressing issues, traffic and schools. On the traffic front I was one of the primary spokesmen representing Dunwoody’s charge to get the DOT and the governor to approve spending $1 billion on the I-285/Ga. 400 interchange. Most of the traffic in Dunwoody is due to commuters looking for a better route when our highways are at a standstill. One thing we can address at the local level is our intersections. We have 13 intersections in the city that need fixing. We are finally getting started at Peeler/No. Peachtree/Tilly Mill. This will be a huge improvement. What’s one thing about Dunwoody you think should change? The county control of our schools has to change. I feel that local control is the answer… we must create our own Dunwoody school system. DeKalb County has the highest school tax rate in the state and yet has a 60 percent graduation rate. That’s failing on any scale. We’ve proven we can run a city, we know we can run a school system as well. I have been the city’s representative for this project speaking to elected representatives
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COMMUNITY from other mayors to state representatives and senators. How do you see Dunwoody in 10 years? I see a safe city that is connected to a network of trails that will allow our citizens to bike or walk from one end to the other. I see a community of families, groups and individuals who are proud of our city and its network of parks and many recreational opportunities. I see a city with its own thriving school system with greatly improved graduation rates. I see a city that continues to be a chosen destination…for us as we age and for our children who will want to raise their children in Dunwoody!
Chris Grivakis
Commercial Lender Why do you want to be mayor? Focus on why we became a city. Re-pave more roads yearly to finish prior to slow schedule we are on. Increase officers to patrol the streets keeping citizens safe (person-to-person crime increased 19 percent last year and 80 precent this year). Protect our students from over-crowding through zoning to stop high-density housing around Perimeter. Support school systems through IGA’s. Stop spending on city hall, gateways, and incentive money like $8.4 million used to attract State Farm. Why should the voters choose you? Strong advocate to keep Dunwoody suburban, prioritize spending on needed projects over interesting projects, and defer spending on City Hall/Gateway projects. I have a financial/analytical background and will use this to determine the pros and cons of each project. For police: increase rent stipend to live in
apartments to deter crime, require working managers, clear intersections. Support changing charter to require city (not council) vote to take over county services in future. What do you see as the most significant issue facing the city right now? How will you address that issue? Over-urbanization (density/height) of Perimeter area based on false assumption that we need taxes from such projects. I would vote against increasing height limits in current re-zoning. Additional children in schools and potential increased fire taxes would be detrimental. Large projects could still be reviewed but with City Council oversight, a safety mechanism that diminishes should height limits increase to 30 stories as proposed in the initial re-zone proposal presented at recent DHA meeting. What’s one thing about Dunwoody you think should change? Stop the notion that we have to build what is in the Master Plan and stop berating anyone who is against something in the Master Plan. The Master Plan is just a guide put together by those who had time to attend these meetings. True vetting occurs when a project is rolled out. Please don’t insult those who dissent by telling them that have no voice since they didn’t attend Master Plan meetings. How do you see Dunwoody in 10 years? With my input: suburban feel, paved streets, police visibility, sidewalks completed, no circle at Vermack/ Womack (or anywhere), height limits on buildings, charter requiring city vote on taking over county services, turf field at Dunwoody High School and Peachtree Charter Middle School with programs offered by city, and school master plan to present to county and school representatives to help us secure needed funds now and provide input on how we want future SPLOST funds to be used in our schools.
Denis Shortal
City Council member from 2008-2015; retired U.S. Marine Brigadier General Why do you want to be mayor? Why should the voters choose you? To provide open and positive leadership for the City Council and all the citizens of Dunwoody. This in-
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cludes returning an attitude of mutual respect to the office of mayor which was a foundation of our becoming a city. The use of basic common sense has been key to Dunwoody’s success so far, and should continue to be a focus of our efforts going forward. The key to being a public servant is doing what you told citizens you would do before you were elected … I have a seven-year record of doing exactly that. What do you see as the most significant issue facing the city right now? How will you address that issue? There is more than one significant issue: - Take control of our public schools. Quality education for our children is not only our goal, but our responsibility. I will personally work with local and state legislators for local control of our schools. - Expedite paving of our streets using surplus funds and reallocation of funds. This will include fixing the “worst first”. Design the scope of our infrastructure projects to produce desired results at a reasonable cost. - Improve our existing parks and recreation assets for use by all citizens across the entire age spectrum. Do this by developing a 10-year Park Improvement Plan created by a citizens’ committee with outside assistance if needed. - Continue to be fiscally prudent with the citizens’ tax dollars to preserve Dunwoody’s long term financial security. What’s one thing about Dunwoody you think should change? A more open and positive mayoral leadership and attitude in dealing with City Council and all citizens. How do you see Dunwoody in 10 years? A city of approximately 50,000 citizens working together to enhance the quality of life for everyone, so Dunwoody can remain a very desirable residential community that is business friendly.
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Time for the state Legislature to form a fair, more transparent process for new cityhood
Senior Account Executives Jeff Kremer Janet Porter
I currently have the honor of serving as the chairman of the Georgia Senate Committee on annexation, de-annexation and municipal incorporation. I sponsored the legislation forming this study committee, S.R. 609, after having witnessed firsthand the confusing, chaotic and all-too-divisive efforts to create the new DeKalb cities of Brookhaven, LaVista Hills and Tucker. The current General Assembly process that gets to a referendum on the formation of a new city could almost be described as ad-hoc. The lack of a formal process leads to the results being even more political than typical legislation taken up by the General Assembly, and this does a disservice to Georgia residents. The time for thinking “this is the last new city so we don’t need a real process to cope with this” is over. A new city is proposed even in Forsyth County, and there is talk of several others. It is time for the Legislature to come up with a fair, less political, more transparent process that serves Georgians SEN. ELENA better. PARENT At our first hearing, we heard testimony from the Association County Commissioners of Georgia, who represent Georgia’s counties, and the Georgia Municipal Association, representing Georgia’s citGUEST COLUMN ies. At our second hearing, we heard from the Andrew Young School at Georgia State and the Carl Vinson Institute for Government at the University of Georgia (CVI). Other knowledgeable groups have presented as well. As we move toward our third meeting, some common themes are emerging. A number of speakers have recommended that we implement a statutory process that would be more transparent and less open to manipulation. Many have also made a recommendation that the committee consider some sort of petition threshold that must be met by a new incorporation. Georgia is one of a small minority of states that have no petition component. A petition process, suggested by CVI, would have additional benefits of ensuring that the borders of the area to be incorporated or annexed are set and can’t be changed at the last minute, leading to more certainty in attempting to conduct a feasibility study. It would also give a better measure of true grassroots support and buy-in. Additionally, including consideration of the broader impacts of new incorporations and annexations has been repeatedly raised. The feasibility studies currently performed by GSU and CVI look at potential impact in the area to be incorporated from a revenue perspective, but no accounting is taken of the potential effects on existing cities or the county, or on school systems. School systems are impacted if an area to be annexed would change school districts, as the case would be with annexations into Decatur or Atlanta. The committee will discuss whether consideration of these impacts should be part of the process. Other states deal with these difficult issues in a myriad of ways. Some have boundary committees or committees at the General Assembly level with professional staff to investigate the need for the city, how it will function, and impact on existing governments before making a recommendation on a new incorporation. Most have a statutory process with a list of factors to be considered. Most all require petitions. At our third and fourth meetings, we will flesh out these themes, hear public comment, hear recommendation and deliberate. The third meeting is on Oct. 21 from 2 to 5 p.m. and the final meeting will be Nov. 3 from 9 a.m. to noon. I am grateful to my committed colleagues, including Sen. Fran Millar (R-Dunwoody), for serving on the study committee, and hope that we can adopt a process that will serve our citizens and our collective future better - no matter where we live.
Account Executives Susan Lesesne Jim Speakman
Sen. Elena Parent (D-Atlanta) represents District 42 in the Georgia Senate. Her district covers much of central DeKalb County and takes in a portion of Brookhaven.
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Thanks, Chris! With this issue, we bid farewell to our founding Creative Director, Chris North. Since January 2007, when the first Reporter paper went to press, he has been involved in the production of every issue—227 in total, including this one—as well as the 29 monthly Atlanta INtown issues published since that acquisition in 2013. Chris was a driving force behind the design of our papers and their respective websites; he’s also been our in-house IT consultant. We’ll miss Chris, but wish him well in his next endeavor, where he’ll be able to spend more time with family (and less time stuck in Ga. 400 traffic).
D o y o u h a v e s o me t hing t o s a y? Send your letters to editor@reporternewspapers.net
OCT. 2 – OCT. 15, 2015 | www.ReporterNewspapers.net
DUN
Perimeter Business A monthly section focusing on business in the Reporter Newspapers communities
Cities seek a prescription for Pill Hill’s traffic BY JOHN RUCH
johnruch@reporternewspapers.net
Pill Hill in Sandy Springs is nicknamed for the three major hospitals—Northside, Emory Saint Joseph’s and Children’s Healthcare of Atlanta—that treat hundreds of thousands of patients a year. But it might as well refer to the aspirin a driver might need for the medical center’s rush-hour traffic headaches. The heart of Pill Hill, the intersection of Peachtree Dunwoody and Johnson Ferry roads, often is clogged. A recent surprise plan for a dense apartment building on a piece of Emory Saint Joseph’s property sparked calls for better Pill Hill planning from the mayors of Sandy Springs and neighboring Brookhaven. Meetings among both city’s engineering staff and the hospitals are in the works. “I’m going to be sitting down with the hospitals…to talk about mobility,” Sandy Springs Mayor Rusty Paul said in August. “It’s truly a public safety issue.” “The bottom line is still the traffic,” said Brookhaven Mayor Rebecca Chase Williams. “We try to work, and certainly talk about working, with a regional view. But now we’ve got to walk the walk.” Emory Saint Joseph’s and Northside said they offer various commuting options to their thousands of employees, many of whom use MARTA’s Medical Center station. But they are open to meeting, they said. “We always welcome dialogue that addresses traffic conditions and traffic safety,” said Northside spokeswoman Katherine Watson. The hospitals agree that there is more to be done in an area also impacted by the neighboring Perimeter Center and the Ga. 400/I285 interchange. Heather Dexter, Emory Saint Joseph’s chief operating officer, said at a recent Sandy Springs Planning Commission meeting that traffic is sometimes a challenge for the hospital’s doctors and ambulances. All three hospitals work with the Perimeter Center Improvement Districts, which offers commuter consulting, and is planning various street and bike path fixes in the area. “We’re very engaged with our hospital community,” said
JOHN RUCH
The intersection of Peachtree Dunwoody and Johnson Ferry roads is often clogged with traffic atop Pill Hill. A recent surprise plan for a dense apartment building on a piece of hospital property sparked calls by the mayors of Sandy Springs and Brookhaven for better planning.
Yvonne Williams, the PCIDs president and CEO. “We know traffic is going to be expanded because so much growth is going on with the medical area and the corporate area in general.” Pill Hill’s boom began when Northside opened its doors in 1970. The other hospitals followed within the next eight years, along with a sprawling array of medical offices and nursing colleges. Today, the medical center is a jewel of the Perimeter, offering a full
range of well-regarded health care, employing thousands, and offering millions of dollars worth of free health screenings and other local charitable activities. At the same time, it’s become increasingly hard to get in and around the area, at least during peak hours. “It’s wonderful we have this fabulous complex of hospitals,” said Sandy Springs City Councilman Tibby DeJulio, whose district includes Pill Hill. Not so
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PERIMETER BUSINESS
Abernathy Road corporate corridor is booming BY JOHN RUCH
johnruch@reporternewspapers.net
A long-planned office complex dubbed NorthPlace is moving ahead at Barfield Road and Mount Vernon Highway in Sandy Springs’ booming corporate-headquarters corridor along Ga. 400 and Abernathy Road. The Perimeter’s thriving office-space market is moving NorthPlace forward. But it remains to be seen whether that momentum will spread to other stalled plans—including an office skyscraper and a luxury hotel—on major parcels around the Ga. 400/Abernathy intersection.
“The rental rate on office space…is really at the highest levels ever,” said Kirk Demetrops, president of Sandy Springsbased MidCity Real Estate Partners, which is teamed with Atlanta’s Crocker Partners on the NorthPlace project. The apartment market was the first real-estate sector to come booming out of the recession, Demetrops said, and now the office market is following suit. Both trends have made a splash on Abnerathy Road just west of Ga. 400, where Mercedes-Benz USA will build its new headquarters alongside more than
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14 NEIGHBORHOOD LOCATIONS IN METRO ATLANTA 10
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PERIMETER BUSINESS
Local Estate-Planning Attorney Focuses on Keeping Children Safe Jim Fletcher lives in Dunwoody with his wife Sara and their 3 daughters. After seeing what can happen when families fail to plan, he has become passionate about helping parents (like him) make sure that they have a fail-safe plan to make sure their kids are cared for by the right people, and provided for financially, if tragedy strikes. Jim also founded the “Kids Protection Center” to help educate parents about ways to keep their children safe.
Dunwoody Attorney Jim Fletcher
Get Dunwoody Estate-Planning Lawyer Jim Fletcher’s free guide SPECIAL
NorthPlace will be located just west of Ga. 400, near other corporations. To see a larger version, go to ReporterNewspapers.net.
sure doesn’t hurt in marketing NorthPlace’s office space, Demetrops said. Then again, he noted, the Ga. 400/ Abernathy/Mount Vernon area has long been attractive to corporations, with its highway and MARTA access. “Corporate headquarters after corporate headquarters have chosen to relocate here,” Demetrops said. Those include UPS, Newell Rubbermaid and Global Payments on Glenlake Parkway. The following projects are pending or underway around the Ga. 400/Abernathy intersection:
Northpark 100
NorthPlace
The 275-room luxury hotel was proposed by the Kessler Collection in 2008 on the wooded parcel ringed by Abernathy, Mount Vernon and Peachtree Dunwoody Road. The project has stalled since then, reportedly due to difficulties in securing financing. Kessler currently has a sign posted on the property advertising 34,500 square feet of it for sale as a “potential high-rise condominium development” to be done “in conjunction with” the hotel. A Kessler spokeswoman said there will be no “official updates” on the hotel until next year at the earliest as the company focuses on an Alabama hotel.
The 3.7-acre NorthPlace office site would be anchored by two office towers, one about six stories and one about 10 stories, along with build-to-suit structures. It’s the second phase of a redevelopment that began about a decade ago with the Promenade at NorthPlace condos farther up Barfield Road. The entire site previously was a car dealership. Demetrops said some potential tenants “have been waiting for us” and will be ready to occupy the site.
Abernathy 400
This massive proposal along Abernathy between Ga. 400 and Barfield broke ground in 2007, but only the Serrano mixed-use building has been built. Plans for over a half-million square feet of offices and a hotel have yet to materialize, though the current development team—Cousins, Ackerman & Co. and H.J. Russell & Company—issued updated drawings last year. The developers did not respond to emails seeking comment.
Tell them you saw it in Reporter Newspapers
A gigantic mixed-use plan with 500 apartments and a 50-story office tower was proposed last year for the 16acre open space in the southeast corner of the Ga. 400/Abernathy intersection. The developer is Hines, who built Dunwoody’s Ravinia tower. After community debate, Hines reduced the scale of its plans, then withdrew them about a year ago. Hines did not respond to emailed questions about the project’s status.
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This 200-unit luxury housing for seniors by Dominion Partners is under construction at 25 Glenlake Parkway. Dominion did not respond to emails seeking comment, but company websites say the project will offer independent living, assisted living and memory care, and is slated for a late 2016 opening.
Dan Sasser loves coming and going as he pleases. That’s just one of many reasons he chose Canterbury Court to be his home. “I left a tenured position so I could live wherever I wanted. Then I retired at 60 and was working part time when I discovered Canterbury Court. I thought, ‘How wonderful it would be to live there.’” When he decided to move to Canterbury Court, he chose a studio apartment, which he says “is more than big enough for me.” The maintenance-free lifestyle also lets him keep a second home in Florida and take frequent road trips. Dan says people are “missing the boat” by not moving to a retirement community sooner. “Here you have several restaurant options, all kinds of activities and excursions, a theater with daily showings, a heated pool and wellness center, 11 acres of beautiful gardens ... it’s like being on a permanent vacation!”
3750 Peachtree Road, N.E. Atlanta, Georgia 30319 canterburycourt.org Canterbury Court is Atlanta’s first and foremost continuing care retirement community, non-profit, and committed to welcoming all people.
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The grand opening of C2 Education of Dunwoody, located at 1402B Dunwoody Village Parkway, was attended by many supporters on Sept. 9. Front row, from left, Stephanie Snodgrass, Dunwoody Perimeter Chamber president, Farrah Joseph, Christopher Babb, Eunice Kwon, Hanh Giang, Dunwoody Mayor Mike Davis, Wendy Hayes and Jina Pak. Back row, from left, Dr. Betsy Wampler, MJ Thomas, Officer Trey, Dunwoody Police Department, Jeff Kremer and Dan Farrar. C2 Education offers personal tutoring, SAT/ACT test help, customized curricula, personalized attention and a wide variety of enrichment services for elementary, middle and high school students.
PERIMETER BUSINESS
AXA Advisors, LLC held a ribbon cutting on Sept. 16, at its location at 780 Johnson Ferry Road, Suite 600, in Atlanta. In attendance, from left, Zack Napier, Joye Swanson, Kathy Benton, Wesley Coxwell, Sam O’Neal, Steve Howell, Antan Wilson, Dave Watson, Lennise Morris, Alan Range and Patty Conway. The company helps connect consumers and businesses with financial services and products to help protect their futures.
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LA Fitness, located at 1155 Mount Vernon Highway, Suite 600, in Dunwoody, recently celebrated their remodel with a ribbon cutting. Friends, family, employees and members of the community were on hand, including, MJ Thomas, Heyward Wescott, Dan Farrar, Jennifer Howard, Logan Williams and Fred Scott. The club offers indoor cycling, racquetball, a kids club, group fitness, basketball, an indoor pool and other amenities.
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PERIMETER BUSINESS
‘Funky and fun’ Psycho Sisters store closing its doors BY JOE EARLE
joeearle@reporternewspapers.net
Stephanie Cramer intends to stay in business through at least one more Halloween. “Halloween is so much fun,” she said. “Come in right before [the holiday] and sit here. It’s energy. Everybody is happy. ... It’s really, really fun at Halloween.” Cramer says she plans to close the Sandy Springs branch of Psycho Sisters, her vintage clothing and costume shop located at 280 Hammond Drive, by the end of the year. The closing won’t affect the remaining Psycho Sisters shops in Little Five Points in Atlanta or in Hapeville, company representatives said. Cramer, who bought the Sandy Springs location 14 years ago, hasn’t set a formal closing date, but says she’ll certainly hold Perimet er on at least through Pro fil e the spooky dress-up holiday that brings big sales to Psycho Sisters shops. How important is Oct. 31 to her business? “We start counting down to Halloween on Nov. 1, the day after Halloween,” she said. But every day can’t be Halloween. And the marketplace for vintage clothing and Halloween costumes is changing, Cramer said. Too many big chains are moving into the suburbs to hawk Halloween costumes and sell vintage clothes. “Everything has a season and Psycho Sisters’ [business] in suburbia has been taken over by the national chains,” said Angie McLean, the store’s founder and original owner, and now CEO of Psycho Sisters Clothing LLC. “She’s really smart to close the store gracefully.” McLean said she started the Psycho Sisters business back in the 1990s, when the nightclubs in Buckhead were booming and people wanted to dress up in fancy clothes for a night on the town.
She started the business with a lookalike friend – they were the “sisters” – she had known in Florida and from metro area clubs, she said. The Sandy Springs shop was the first Psycho Sisters to open, she said. Why Sandy Springs? Partly for its proximity to the club scene, she said. But mostly, “I just picked a place on the map,” she said. Soon, she opened another Psycho Sisters shop in Little Five Points. Psycho Sisters branches started spreading across the metro area, from Hapeville to Cartersville. Cramer, who lived in Dunwoody, was a regular customer of the Sandy Springs shop, the two women said. Fourteen years ago, when McLean decided she’d spread herself too thin and that she needed to sell the Sandy Springs shop, Cramer happened to be looking for a business to move into. “I needed something,” she said. “It fell right into my lap.” She had just had her first child, she said. Owning and operating the shop meant she could bring her child to work with her. “I wanted something where I didn’t need to day care my child. I went in one day and saw a for sale sign. I called my husband and said, ‘Sisters is for sale.
Business and retail briefs The Buckhead Atlanta development quietly changed its name to The Shops Buckhead Atlanta last month, according to a report from Tomorrow’s News Today. No formal announcement was made, but the development’s website and social media accounts were all updated to the new moniker. SRS Real Estate Partners (SRS) announced that the project leasing team in Atlanta has secured three new leases at Gateway, a 21-acre, mixed-use development at the intersection of Roswell Road and Windsor Parkway in Sandy Springs. The 121,071-square-foot mixed-use development project, which is owned by Core Property Capital, consists of 630 apartment units, a 20,000-square-foot office component and 100,000-square-feet of commercial/retail space. Buttermilk Sky Pie Shop, which makes handmade pies, has leased a 1,530-square-foot space. Kale Me Crazy, an organic juice and smoothie bar, has leased 850 square feet; and Blast, a boutique fitness concept, is relocating from Buckhead to a 2,765-square-feet space. This will be Kale Me Crazy’s fourth location in the Atlanta market. The Metro Atlanta Chamber has announced that Kate Atwood will join the organization as vice president of marketing. In this newly created role, she will be responsible for leading the recently launched ChooseATL regional marketing campaign. At-
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PHOTOS BY JOE EARLE
Left, Stephanie Cramer, who bought the Sandy Springs Psycho Sisters location 14 years ago, will close the store by the end of the year. Above, Halloween brings big sales to the chain.
I’m buying it!’ I raised my daughter in the store... “It’s been a wonderful journey. I think it made [my daughters] very special children because they grew up with shoppers coming in.” Psycho Sisters still is crammed with Halloween costumes – Harry Potters and Elvises and Disney princesses and “Star Wars” outfits for the kids, and nurses and showgirls and other more adult disguises for the grownups – but Cramer says some of her customers have changed through the years. Nowadays, she said, older women drop by the shop to try out jewelry because they’ve never had their ears pierced. Psycho Sisters still sells clasp earrings. At the same time, teenagers come in to check out the racks of vin-
tage tops and skirts, she said. “Sandy Springs has changed so much,” she said. “This shop was more funky 14 years ago. I’m still trying to keep it funky and fun.” Besides, after 14 years of running her own shop, Cramer decided the time had come to try something new. Her daughters now are at an age where she wants to spend more time with them after school. And she and her husband, who remodels houses, are talking of working together in a real-estatebased business. “I’m ready for a life change,” she said. “It’s not a midlife crisis, it’s a life change. I love doing this, but I’m ready for a change. “I think I could do well at real estate. It’s something that interests me.”
wood will focus on managing a multipronged marketing campaign that includes paid, earned, social and digital media. She will also spearhead the campaign’s fundraising efforts and work closely with multiple partners and stakeholders in the 29-county region to showcase metro Atlanta. Prior to joining MAC, she served as executive director of the Arby’s Foundation. In 2003, Atwood founded Kate’s Club, an innovative grief support organization for children and teens facing life after the death of a parent or sibling. Burn Studios, a multiplatform boutique studio offering stadium-seated cycling, high-cardio kickboxing and various forms of yoga, will open in the new Brookleigh Development, 3575 Durden Dr., Suite 202, in Brookhaven. Burn Studios will open alongside Pure Taqueria, Primrose, Brookwood Provisions, and the soon-to-open Glaze, a doughnut and coffee bar. Elite Crowdfund has launched its online equity-based platform in Atlanta, which allows investors to connect directly with vetted, early stage investment opportunities in exchange for an equity share in the company, while offering startup or early stage funding. Elite Crowdfund’s portfolio of business opportunities is only available to accredited investors, defined by the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission as an individual with annual net income of more than $200,000 individually or $300,000 jointly, or whose net worth is more than $1 million annually, excluding the value of a primary residence. For more information, visit elitecrowfund.com.
PERIMETER BUSINESS
Pedestrians may encounter safety and wayfinding challenges when navigating around Pill Hill.
JOHN RUCH
Cities seek a prescription for Pill Hill’s traffic CONTINUED FROM PAGE 1
wonderful, DeJulio said, was when he recently was stuck in traffic through 10 cycles of a traffic light next to Northside Hospital. “We need to have a coordinated plan for traffic in the Pill Hill area, where we need to bring all three hospitals together,” DeJulio said. “As the hospitals continue to grow and the population continues to age more…I think it’s just going to continue to get worse.” Children’s Healthcare last month filed paperwork to expand its Pill Hill hospital by 60 beds. A new, much larger Ronald McDonald House, which houses families of ill children, is going up at Peachtree Dunwoody and the Glenridge Connector. Northside owns a huge vacant parcel, the site of a former hotel, marked with signs saying only, “Planning for growth, investing in the future.” Then there’s Emory Saint Joseph’s plan to sell a Johnson Ferry parcel to North American Properties for a 305unit apartment building along the Brookhaven border. North American says it will be just the sort of walkable project that could help relieve Pill Hill’s traffic crunch. Neighbors worry it will add to the traffic nightmare. Lack of notice in Brookhaven was also a concern, drawing Mayor Williams to hold unusual meetings with Sandy Springs officials, helping to spark the new attention to Pill Hill. Communication is an underlying issue: city to city, hospital to city, and both to the neighborhoods. Mayor Williams said she was surprised by Emory Saint Joseph’s “radio silence” on the apartment plan. DeJulio said, “We don’t really hear from the hospitals.” “We are open to having broader conversations and look forward to working with city officials, since the governments will ultimately be responsible for the infrastructure required to make…improvements,” said Emory Saint Joseph’s spokeswoman Mary Beth Spence.
Yvonne Williams said the PCIDs work with the hospitals in two major ways that have helped. One is the new Perimeter Connects commuter consulting program, which helps with such efforts as carpool and reduced MARTA fares. It’s also talking with hospitals about consolidating some of their shuttle services. Then there are major infrastructure projects like the proposed widening of Peachtree Dunwoody, including adding bike lanes, under I-285. That would connect with the PATH400 multiuse trail planned to run between Pill Hill and Ga. 400. Such “multimodal” transportation projects would be a huge help, Williams said, and the pending Ga. 400/I-285 interchange project is a big opportunity for fixes. A previous project, completed in 2009, added better sidewalks and other streetscape for pedestrians. Another big opportunity is some type of transit-oriented development directly around the MARTA station, as MARTA is planning at some other stations, including in Brookhaven. Williams said there no formal plans for that yet. Pill Hill’s issues can be complex. While rush-hour traffic is bad, the streets can be relatively clear on off hours. Pedestrians, on the other hand, can still have safety and wayfinding challenges. The streets have wide crossings where cars turn against walk signals. Construction blocked some local sidewalks last week. On two recent Pill Hill visits, lost pedestrians were struggling to find Emory Saint Joseph’s and a medical office located in one of the many nondescript buildings. Yvonne Williams said that having the Perimeter Center’s “corporate community, a Fortune 500 community, right adjacent to a medical center is very unique…It makes it a very appealing area. Our assets are very strong. We just need to develop opportunities to connect those uses.”
Ultimately, it’s your experience that matters. To be sure, we’re proud of our 27 years of experience in senior living. But, to us, what really matters is your experience at our communities. We do everything with that idea clearly in mind. So, go ahead, enjoy yourself with great social opportunities and amenities. Savor fine dining every day. And feel assured that assisted living services are always available if needed. We invite you to experience The Piedmont for yourself at a complimentary lunch and tour. Please call 404.381.1743 to schedule.
Ask about our Assisted Living services.
Supportive services are available at The Piedmont. See how a little help can give you so much peace of mind.
I n de p e n de n t & A s s i s t e d L i v i ng P r e v iou s ly k now n a s T h e H a l l m a r k
650 Phipps Boulevard NE • Atlanta, GA www.ThePiedmontatBuckhead.com • 404.381.1743
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Dunwoody Home Tour
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Wednesday, Oct. 7, 9:30 a.m.-3 p.m. –
Saturday, Oct. 17, 6-10 p.m. – The Commu-
The 43rd annual Dunwoody Home Tour brings visitors to five homes in Dunwoody and nearby Sandy Springs. Tickets: $25 in advance; $30 on the day of the tour. Purchase online at the Dunwoody Woman’s Club website: dunwoodywomansclub.org. All ticket proceeds benefit the diversified service products of the club, a 501.3c charitable organization.
Tour de Dunwoody Saturday, Oct. 17, 9 a.m. – The Dunwoody
Elementary School presents their annual family bike ride. Riders can participate in the Tiger Route, a police escorted 3-mile ride through the streets of Dunwoody, or take the Cub Route, a shorter, closed course through the campus. Students will be accepting pledges to raise money for the Dunwoody Elementary Tiger Fund Campaign, which makes possible activities and equipment for the school. All riding abilities welcome. Registration: $20 per person and comes with event t-shirt. Dunwoody Element ary School, 1923 Womack Rd., Dunwoody, 30338. Have questions? Go to tourdedunwoody.com or email: klewis00@yahoo.com.
nity Assistance Center presents the 13th annual Vintage Affair fundraiser event. Award winning wineries, top local restaurants, silent and live auctions all come together for an evening of charity and giving. Tickets are $110 per person or $200 per couple. For information on sponsorships, volunteer opportunities and tickets, contact Vintage Affair chairwoman Shelly Dozier-McKee at shelly.confettistyle@gmail. com. Go online to vintageaffair.org to purchase tickets. Holy Innocents’ Episcopal Church, 805 Mount. Vernon Hwy., NW, Sandy Springs, 30327.
Harvest on the Hooch Sunday, Oct. 18, 1-4 p.m. – The Chatta-
hoochee Nature Center presents “Harvest on the Hooch,” celebrating farm-to-table practices. Visitors enjoy a garden party tasting, featuring high-profile restaurants, live bluegrass music and activities. Proceeds benefit the center’s Unity Garden, which supplies more than five tons of fresh produce annually to the North Fulton Community Charities’ food pantry. Rain or shine event. Tickets: $40 for adults; $15 for kids; free for ages 10 and under. Chattahoochee Nature Center, 9135 Willeo Rd., Roswell, 30075. Find out more at chattnaturecenter.org.
FOR KIDS & FAMILIES
The Boxtrolls
Run Your Happy Tails Off
Tuesday, Oct. 6, 5:30-7:30 p.m. – Kids and
Saturday, Oct. 10, 8 a.m. – The second an-
families are invited to watch this PG film following Eggs, a young orphaned boy raised by underground, cave-dwelling trash collectors. Light snacks provided. Free and open to the first 25 participants. Brookhaven Branch Library, 1242 N. Druid Hills Rd., Brookhaven, 30319. To learn more go to dekalblibrary.org or call 404-848-7140.
Button Mania Thursday, Oct. 8, 11:30 a.m.-1 p.m. –
Drop in and craft one-of-a-kind buttons for yourself and your friends at this workshop. Use personal photographs, illustrations, magazines and other artwork to make unique pins for your bags and jackets. Free. Appropriate for teens and adults. Registration requested by emailing: amy.alexander@fultoncountyga.gov. Need more information? Go to afpls.org. Buckhead Branch Library, 269 Buckhead Ave., NE, Buckhead, 30305.
Night Hike Friday, Oct. 9, 8-9 p.m. – Bring the family
for a leisurely night hike around the wetlands and back forests of Dunwoody Park. Educators from the Dunwoody Nature Center will guide groups through the hike and educate participants on the sounds of nocturnal creatures. Free. Dunwoody Nature Center, 5343 Roberts Dr., Dunwoody, 30338. Call 770-394-3322 or go online to dunwoodynature.org to learn more.
nual Run Your Happy Tails Off Run and Festival benefiting Happy Tails Pet Therapy returns to Brook Run Park in Dunwoody. Fun Run begins at 8 a.m., followed by a 5K at 8:30 a.m. Post-race festival starts at 1 p.m. and offers food from local vendors. Course is USATF qualified. All dogs must be on a fixed (not retractable) leash no longer than six feet. Two dogs maximum per person. Go to runyourhappytailsoff.com for more details and to register. Advanced online registration is $35 for the 5K and $25 for the Fun Run through October 9. Day of registration is $40 for the 5K and $30 for the Fun Run. 4770 North Peachtree Rd., Dunwoody, 30338.
Fall Festival Saturday, Oct. 10, 10:30 a.m.-2 p.m. – The Open Arms Child Development Center
preschool hosts their annual Fall Festival fundraiser. Wristbands are $5 each, and include pony rides, petting zoo, beauty station, pirate make-over, inflatable bouncy houses, go fish, matchbox races and silent auction. Proceeds benefit programming at the center. 4000 Ro-
out & about swell Rd., Buckhead, 30342. To find out more, email: missibea@hotmail.com or go online to openarmsbuckhead.org.
Fall Fun Day Sunday, Oct. 11 9:30-11:30 a.m. – Celebrate
the onset of fall at the Marcus Jewish Community Center in Dunwoody. Families will enjoy a petting zoo, bounce house, face painting, crafts and more. Snacks and drinks provided. Suitable for all ages. For additional information go online to atlantajcc.org, contact Ilana Schlam at ilana.schlam@atlantajcc.org or call 678-812-5342. $20 for members, $32 nonmembers. 5342 Tilly Mill Rd., Dunwoody, 30338.
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Bluer Heron Nature Preserve hosts a guided walk around the property, aimed at engaging children with sensory experiences in nature. Accompanying adults will learn how to provide and encourage similar experiences in a safe and positive way. As a bonus, come away with a treasure made from natural materials. Suitable for kids ages 5 and under. Tickets: $5 for adults. Free for children. Strollers are welcome, but the terrain is uneven. Register online at bhnp.org. 4055 Roswell Rd., Buckhead, 30342.
Big Hero 6 Thursday, Oct. 15, 5 p.m. – Come out
CSI Academy Tuesday, Oct. 13, 4:30-5:30 p.m. – Learn all about the science behind forensic investigation in this familyfriendly class and workshop, part of the Big Thinkers series. Made popular by TV shows such as “CSI” and “Law & Order,” kids have an opportunity to learn about the technical aspects of the job. Registration required. Space is limited. Stop in the Sandy Springs Branch Library, call 404-303-6130 or email: leah.germon@fultoncountyga.gov to register. Go to afpls.org for details. 395 Mount Vernon Hwy., Sandy Springs, 30328.
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and see a family-friendly movie, “Big Hero 6,” under the stars at Brook Run Park. Snacks available for purchase from food trucks starting at 5 p.m.; screening of the movie begins at dusk. Lawn chairs and blankets encouraged. Free and suitable for all ages. Sponsored by the Dunwoody Police Department. 4770 N. Peachtree Rd., Dunwoody, 30338. For more details go to cvbdunwoody.com.
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Monday, Oct. 12, 10 a.m.-1 p.m. – Kids are
invited to show off their favorite costumes in a Halloween parade and festival at the Atlanta History Center. Kids will enjoy costume contests, trick-ortreating throughout the museum, creepy tales and themed art projects, and toddlers and preschoolers will learn a bit of history. Free for members; nonmember tickets are $6.50 for adults and $5.50 for children. Discounted rates available for groups of 10 or more children. Call 404-814-4110 or go to atlantahistorycenter.com with questions. 130 West Paces Ferry Rd., NW, Buckhead, 30305.
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Charter Middle School presents the sixth annual fall festival following the CV Classic 5K Run. 5K starts at 8 a.m.; 1-mile run/ walk starts at 8:30 a.m. Bracelets are $15, and include access to inflatables, games, crafts, face painting and fair hair. Concessions, a bake sale, book sale, photo booth and silent auction available for cash sale. Race and run/walk are rain or shine events. Race registration, $20. Find out more online at peachtreechartermiddleschool.org. 4644 N. Peachtree Rd., Dunwoody, 30338.
Tree Climb Adventure Saturday, Oct. 17, 10 a.m.-4 p.m. –
Join Peter “Treeman” Jenkins and his team from Tree Climbers International for an afternoon of tree climbing education. Participants learn techniques from the founders of the sport at the Dunwoody Nature Center. Must be 6 years of age or older. Admission is $25 for members and $30 for non-members. Questions? Go to dnc. org or call 770-394-3322. 5343 Roberts Dr., Dunwoody, 30338.
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Center Ceramics Department hosts the 14th annual “Free Beans with Every Bowl” sale. Visitors can peruse and purchase a wide variety of high-quality ceramics created on site by Spruill students and faculty, then stay for a helping of chili. Cash and checks only. Free and open to the public. Continues Saturday, Oct. 17, 10 a.m.-5 p.m. Spruill Center for the Arts, 5339 Chamblee-Dunwoody Rd., Dunwoody, 30338. Need additional information? Go to spruillarts. org or call 770-394-3447.
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OCT. 2 – OCT. 15, 2015 | 17
out & about
State parks provide public places to admire autumn leaves BY JOE EARLE
joeearle@reporternewspapers.net
The return of autumn means it’s time to hit the highway and check out the changing colors of fall in the Georgia mountains. The Georgia Department of Natural Resources says late October and early November usually bring the peak weeks to admire the reds and golds of the changing leaves. Georgia’s state parks system brags that its parks offer some of the best leaf-peeping around. And, through a website called Leaf Watch, the park system guides tourists to places where they can find the best fall color. For regular updates on where to see leafy views that are at or near their colorful peaks, go to gastateparks.org/leafwatch. “Beginning in October, regular updates will keep travelers posted on how fall color is progressing across Georgia’s Blue Ridge,” the state says. “The website is filled with top trails and overlooks, mountain cabins and campsites, fall events and safe hiking tips.” And state officials enourage photographers to post their favorite shots to the Georgia State Parks’ Facebook page and on Instagram. This year, DNR recommends a number of state parks to check out for fall color. Here are 10 likely prospects:
1
CLOUDLAND CANYON STATE PARK A hike down a long, steep staircase in this park takes visitors to a pair of waterfalls. The 5-mile West Rim Loop is moderately difficult and offers great
views of the canyon. For more: gastateparks. org/CloudlandCanyon
2
RED TOP MOUNTAIN STATE PARK Located about a 40-minute drive north of Atlanta, Red Top Mountain offers views of lake and forest. Families with young children will find a paved walking path behind the park office, park officials say. For more: gastateparks.org/RedTopMountain
3
FORT MOUNTAIN STATE PARK Although it may be best known for a mysterious rock wall along the mountain top, Fort Mountain offers a variety of hiking trails. They range from a 1.2-mile loop around a lake to an 8-mile, all-day hike. Ga. 52 has beautiful mountain scenery and overlooks. For more: gastateparks.org/ FortMountain
4
AMICALOLA FALLS STATE PARK Located an hour north of Atlanta, this park includes the Southeast’s tallest cascading waterfall. The falls can be viewed from both easy and difficult trails. The park gets very busy on pretty October weekends, the state says. For more: gastateparks.org/AmicalolaFalls/Trails
5
VOGEL STATE PARK The 4-mile Bear Hair Gap Trail makes a nice day trip for experienced hikers, offering great mountain color and a bird’s-eye view of the park’s lake, state parks officials say. The twisting roads around Vogel, particularly Wolf Pen Gap Road, offer some of north Georgia’s prettiest fall scenery. For more: gastateparks.org/Vogel
6
SMITHGALL WOODS STATE PARK If you’re heading to Helen’s Oktoberfest,
8
1 3
5
7 6
1. Cloudland Canyon
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2. Red Top Mountain 3. Fort Mountain State Park 4. Amicalola 5. Vogel 6. Smithgall 7. Unicoi 8. Moccasin 9. Black Rock Mountain 10. Tallulah Gorge
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UNICOI STATE PARK Unicoi promises hiking, mountain biking, a lake with a beach and a 100-room lodge that hosts conferences, weddings and retreats. For more: gastateparks.org/Unicoi
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MOCCASIN CREEK STATE PARK Georgia’s smallest state park sits on the shore of a gorgeous deep-green lake. Ga. 197 is a particularly pretty road, according to state officials. For more: gastateparks.org/MoccasinCreek
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BLACK ROCK MOUNTAIN STATE PARK Black Rock Mountain (altitude 3,640 feet) is Georgia’s highest state park. It offers sweeping views of the Blue Ridge Mountains from roadside overlooks and its visitor’s center, according to the state parks system. For more: gastateparks.org/ BlackRockMountain-Hiking
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TALLULAH GORGE STATE PARK Tallulah offers one of the most spectacular canyons in the Southeast. Visitors can choose from easy or difficult trails as they hike through the park. Hikes along the rim offer several overlooks with waterfall views. Hikers with permits from the park office may trek all the way to the bottom of the gorge. Exhibits in the park’s interpretive center highlight the history of the Victorian resort town and the rugged terrain and ecosystem. An award-winning film features footage of kayakers and news clips from daredevil Karl Wallenda’s tightrope walk across the gorge. For more: gastateparks.org/TallulahGorge
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OCT. 2 – OCT. 15, 2015 | 19
EDUCATION
These Founding Fathers take to Twitter as they start a revolution There were anachronisms, to be sure. George Washington tweeted the whole event. Ben Franklin’s cane looked more than a little like a Halloween prop. One Founding Father wore a patch for the New England Patriots. And in place of his usual tri-corner hat, John Hancock wore a cheese head. “It’s a triangle,” sniffed Adam Rubinger, explaining the orange headgear he wore as he played the part of Hancock. Still, by the time this particular meeting of the Second Continental Congress was done, all the major points had been covered. The delegates had voted to rebel against Great Britain, drum up a militia and sign a short, to-the-point Declaration of Independence that read: “In 1776, we solemnly declare ourselves independent of Great Britain.” Who needs the real Thomas Jefferson and all his wordiness? As Davis Academy history teacher Matthew Barry saw it, everything went just fine in this year’s version of his annual eighth-grade re-enactment of the Second Continental Congress, the gatherings in 1775 and 1776 that led to the creation of this country. Barry played Washington, complete with buff-and-tan coat, white wig, tricorner hat and Twitter account. “Thirty or 40 people are following [on Twitter]
right now, including Independence Hall in Philadelphia, which is cool,” he said shortly after the start of the class. (Washington isn’t the AROUND only historTOWN ic character Barry plans JOE EARLE to bring into class during the school year. He’s also got costumes he uses to portray Sitting Bull, Abraham Lincoln, Teddy Roosevelt and a pair of Civil War soldiers, one from each side, and a few others, he said. “If there’s a chance for me to dress up, I will,” he said.) This was the 11th time he had organized a recreation of the Second Continental Congress. The four-hour event has become a favorite part of the school year. Students look forward to it. Parents come and watch for part of the day. It’s Barry’s way of trying to get students engaged with history, and have a little fun with it, rather than just reading about it.
Students re-enacting the Second Continental Congress gather around teacher Matthew Barry’s laptop to videochat with a class in Chicago.
“It’s one of the most exciting parts of the eighth grade,” said parent David Rubinger, whose twin sons Adam and Eric were taking part this year and whose two older children had been through previous congressional re-enactments. “He really brings history to life in a way I don’t remember when I
was going to school.” This year, 58 eighth-graders from Barry’s U.S. history and government classes gathered in the school library to portray the delegates. Flags of the rebellion, including several showing a coiled snake and reading “Don’t tread on me” lined the back walls, and an image of a
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EDUCATION
PHOTOS BYJOE EARLE
At left, Davis Academy student Ian Quegan discusses revolutionary ideas with fellow delegates. Teacher Matthew Barry, above and at right, portrayed George Washington, and tweeted the entire event.
tax collector hanged in effigy was projected at the front of the room. Each student played the part of a particular delegate to the original Second Continental Congress, which met in Philadelphia back in 1775 and 1776. Barry’s classes contained two students too many for the 56 actual delegates, so the extras portrayed other Sons of Liberty from the time, including Paul Revere. The students dressed in a variety of costumes to represent their 18th century characters. Some wore white wigs. Others donned costume tri-corner hats, boots, vests or long coats with knee-length pants.
At one point, someone shouted at Samuel Felner that he had a stain on his trousers. “They’re not trousers,” he replied. “They’re baseball pants.” There were girls among the delegates, too. Several wore long braids. “I think we’re supposed to be boys,” said Gabi Louis, who played the part of Arthur Middleton of South Carolina. Seated at 13 tables covered with green tablecloths and small, electric candles, the delegates shouted approval or disapproval as various positions were presented and argued. They banged on tabletops. They hooted at opponents.
RECYCLE
“Arguing is a very fun aspect,” said Adam Prass, who portrayed New York delegate James Duane and drew catcalls for arguing against independence. Debate touched the major issues of the day: slavery, trade, how to raise a navy when you don’t have one, what to make of battles with British soldiers in Boston. At their table, Jonah Medoff and Arie Voloschin worked on a drawing of the tarring and feathering of a tax collector. Once all the shouting and tablebanging and presentation of arguments were done, 11 delegations voted to de-
clare independence, Barry said the next morning. Two delegations voted to abstain. That suited Barry just fine. “I just let them go with it,” he said. And you can take nothing for granted when it comes to recreating history. Past re-enactments have varied in their outcome. Over its 11 years, Barry said, the Davis Academy version of the Continental Congress is 10 and 1 when voting for independence. One year, the whole thing collapsed into bickering. “They went to war with each other,” he said. “North Carolina declared war on South Carolina.”
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OCT. 2 – OCT. 15, 2015 | 21
COMMUNITY
Food: It’s all good for you
Years of research help create years of memories.
In a perfect world, my favorite foods would have magical properties. Croissants would make my hair smooth and silky, potato chips would make me sing on key, and bacon would kill germs that cause bad breath. Lo and behold, dear readers, that world has arrived! Every time I log-on, I see a new announcement splashed across the Internet that a formerly forbidden food is now considered healthy. It started with chocolate…dark chocolate. Somewhere, somehow, someone discovered that dark chocolate is jampacked with antioxidants, which of course are the superheroes of our generation, and furthermore, that dark chocolate releases endorphins, which are good for the soul. Chocolate with ice cream is even better for the soul, and if there is coconut oil somewhere in the mix, it will kill your belly fat as you eat it. The happy news continues. Coffee is good for the muscles, red wine is good for the heart, hamburger and avocados are good for the brain, and beer is a probiotic. And to round things out, I will add that olive oil and garlic are good for the joints. It’s as if we’ve fallen into the Land of Oz. Pretty soon we’ll learn that apple strudel whitens teeth and pasta quattroformaggi improves your chances of winning the lottery. Why, just today, a headline appeared in the “healthy living” section of my newsfeed, entitled, “The Top Ten Best Foods You Can Eat.” I took the bait and clicked on the link. All the usual suspects were there—blueberries, kefir, beans, spinach—but buried in the middle were mushrooms, which gave me pause, and then, making a grand finale appearance on the list, was pork! Pork, people, pork! Well, now we’re talking. It appeared to me that all food is trending “good for you,” so I decided to try a little experiment. I googled random foods and attached the question, “Is it good for you?” And I have discovered that (with the exception of strawberries,
which we’ve been eating all wrong, but that’s another column) it’s all good! Guided by my original wish list, I went craROBIN JEAN zy and started with, “Are MARIE CONTE croissants ROBIN’S NEST good for you?” I found a site which explained that, sure enough, they are! Croissants contain iron and selenium, and even though I have never in my life heard of selenium, it happens to be an essential mineral, and that is good enough for me. And take our old friend bacon, for example. I googled, “Is bacon good for you?” and up popped a post that is entirely devoted to the virtues of bacon. It’s on a website called Bacon Today, posted by Boss Hog (who else) and liked by, at last count, 24,735 humans. It is titled “Top Ten Reasons Bacon is Actually HEALTHY for You!” and it informs us that bacon is good for the brain, the heart, blood pressure, general well-being, and that it can fuel your car and major industry, too. I have spent several days researching the health benefits of foods-formerlyknown-as-unhealthy. I have concluded that a hamburger cooked medium well, covered with mushrooms and melted Swiss cheese, served with a side of (gluten-free) chips, guacamole and a beer, and finished with a dark-chocolate brownie a la mode, is the ultimate brain-powering, endorphin-boosting, healthy meal. Plus, after you eat it, you will make all the green lights. Robin Conte is a writer and mother of four who lives in Dunwoody. She can be contacted at robinjm@earthlink.net.
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COMMUNITY
Let’s rock! The band No Solution, comprised of North Atlanta High School students Devon Gates, Max Bittner, Chris Robinson and Atlanta Classical Academy student Micah MacLane, recently won the the Atlanta Blues Challenge, Youth Division, sponsored by the Atlanta Blues Society.
There’s so many! Olivia Berry, a student at Spalding Drive Elementary, is wowed by the mountain of shoes collected by the school’s Shoes for Paws service project, in which donated shoes are cleaned and shipped to those in need.
It’s fast, it’s fun! North Springs Charter High School algebra student Deraun Fry, center, shows off a “classroom response device” that encourages students to participate in math class. The school’s math department won a $10,000 grant from the Sandy Springs Society. Also on hand, from left, Friends of North Springs Foundation grant chair Mary Reid, Sandy Springs’ philanthropy chair Joan Plunkett, Sandy Springs Society President Karen Meinzen McEnerny, Principal Eddie Ruiz, Math Department Chair Jessica Woods and Foundation President Sandra Jewell.
CARLA THOMAS
Far out! At left, Susan Oltman of Brookhaven, and April Whitt of Dunwoody, second from right, recently joined NASA for two scientific research flights. Also on board were Nichelle Nichols, known As Lt. Uhura on “Star Trek” and Ivor Dawson of the Traveling Space Museum.
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OCT. 2 – OCT. 15, 2015 | 23
EDUCATION
Standout Student Student Profile: Ansley Guthrie Whitefield Academy, junior Ansley Guthrie is a young philanthropist with a passion for graphic design. Last summer, she traveled to Uganda, caring for imprisoned children. With siblings adopted from China, Ansley has always felt an urge to help children less fortunate than she was growing up. She is amazed at how such a small effort by her family helped her siblings in such a huge way. It also motivated her to help in other ways when given the opportunity. The perfect one presented itself this past summer. Her godparents live in Uganda and work for Sixty Feet, which is mainly a well-digging service for drought-ridden towns and villages. Ansley explained that they hit water at 60 feet under the ground, hence the name. The organization has divisions outside of well digging: clothing, food and a few others, including working in children’s prisons. She explained that her godparents are in charge of all the company’s Ugandan operations, so they knew when they needed help. Ansley was eager to help out and to take a trip to Uganda.
The children’s prisons in Uganda are very different than the juvenile correctional facilities in the United States. In Uganda, Ansley said, children can be imprisoned if they beg or simply cannot find their family in public. Ansley went to work every day in these prisons, giving the children food, water and clothes, and simply being someone they could talk to.
The teenagers and older boys value the conversations, Ansley said. And she admits that her time wasn’t spent in completely selfless action; she loved the conversation and time with the children as much as they did. Overall, she enjoyed her time in Uganda, and plans to go back in the future. In addition to her humanitarian endeavors, she is very enthusiastic about art. Ansley said she loves graphic design and hopes to pursue it in the future. Also, she would like to incorporate graphic design into helping less fortunate children. She hopes to create advertising to raise awareness for organizations such as Sixty Feet. Art and graphic design is very much a part of Ansley’s life at school. She is in
“ Weber students embrace the creative process and connect with who they are artistically, culturally, and spiritually.”
AP Art and a member of the Art Club. AP Art teacher Rebecca Brown says Ansley’s work is “thought provoking and highly original.” “She enjoys working creatively to produce conceptual works of art that are highly skillful,” Brown said. “Ansley is one of the most considerate students I have ever taught. She is compassionate and generous, and lives out our school’s mission statement in all she does, but especially the part – ‘for others ahead of self.’” Ansley also is a member of the Whitefield tennis team. She plays number 3 singles, and the team went to regional competition last year. This coming spring, she will captain the varsity girls’ team.
What’s Next: While her college search is well underway, Ansley is sure that she wants to go to college either in New York or Chicago. She says the energy of a big city excites her and draws her in. Also, she is inspired by the constant movement and happening of a large urban area. This article was reported and written by Sam Wimpfheimer, a student at The Galloway School.
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Raising The Standard of Care
Our team has grown... thanks to you!
Going up The Riverwood International Charter School’s gym played host to a three-game varsity volleyball match between the Riverwood Raiders and the Dunwoody High School Wildcats on Sept. 17. Above, Wildcat players Cam Christopher, left, Amanda Gild, center, and Talley Davidson defend. Left, Dunwoody player Caroline Madden defends the net as Raider Taylor Robinson attacks the ball. Below, Dunwoody team members Madison McKnight, Caroline Madden, Hope Turner, Amanda Gild, Lisa Gardner and Bridget Boyle celebrate the point. The Wildcats won the match 2 games to 1.
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PHOTOS BY PHIL MOSIER
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COMMUNITY
Infrastructure plan predates city incorporation CONTINUED FROM PAGE 1
cars in and out, the mayor said. “Unfortunately, there were no real plans made with the county and developers to make sure we gridded all this out before [development started],” he said. Davis said if Dunwoody can add connector roads, such as the one planned between Peachtree-Dunwoody Road and Perimeter Center Parkway on the State Farm campus, commuters will use them to get to highways, instead of cutting through neighborhoods. “That’s the way it’s supposed to work,” he said. The city of Dunwoody will spend $500,000 toward engineering and design, and the city is hopeful a grant from the State Road and Tollway Authority will match that, Davis said. Davis said the state’s planned $1 billion remake of the interchange of I-285 and Ga. 400 will take about three years to complete and that construction of the Westside Connector would start afterward. “We’re looking at four or five years,” Davis said. The Westside Connector was conceptualized in the 2011 Perimeter Community Improvement Districts’ 10-year plan, but wasn’t a reality until this year. The Westside Connector plan started “when the owners of Crown Holdings, who own the old Gold Kist property,
SPECIAL
Dunwoody city officials say plans are underway to develop a $20 million connector road coming off I-285, going under AshfordDunwoody Road and connecting with Perimeter Center Parkway. To see a larger version, go to ReporterNewspapers.net.
came to us and offered us the property for the road at no cost,” Davis said. Charles Brown, with Crown Holdings, offered to donate about 2 acres of the 15-acre site to the city of Dunwoody. An affiliate of Crown Holdings Group — Dunwoody Crown Towers LLC — acquired the former GoldKist/ Cotton States headquarters in 2013. Dunwoody’s public works director, Michael Smith, worked on the core
team that came up with the 10-year plan for the PCIDs. “If you read the description in the PCIDs’ plan, these kinds of connections were contemplated with private development participation or cooperation,” Smith said. Davis said the land itself could be worth more than $8 million, so the connector project would have been prohibitively expensive without the land donation. “State Farm paid $8 million an
acre for the property right next door,” Davis said. With improvements planned for Ga. 400 and I-285, Davis said getting the Westside Connector project “on the board” will allow the city to seek additional funding from state and federal agencies. The PCIDs’ LCI study shows a connector road coming through the old Gold Kist site, with connections to build out a grid, but not connecting to I-285, Smith said. “That’s the part of the project we brought forward, but it did show a roadway in here with connections to Hammond,” Smith said. Dunwoody will have to work with the Georgia Department of Transportation as well as the Federal Highway Administration to secure money to finish building the Westside Connector, but the money for the design is in place, Davis said. Doug Hooker, the executive director of the Atlanta Regional Commission, said he feels confident about the project’s future. “I think it’s a good possibility that it’s a project that Georgia DOT will want to support,” Hooker said. “It’ll be a matter of timing and when they can work it into their budget.”
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PUBLIC SAFETY
ChatComm shows just how far 911 technology has come CONTINUED FROM PAGE 1
ChatComm has changed in other ways, too. It has grown during its six years of operation. The agency, owned by the cities of Sandy Springs and Johns Creek, dispatches police and fire officers in those cities and police officers in Dunwoody and Brookhaven. It was the first public-private partnership to run a 911 call center, Pierce said. Pierce said he predicts that with coming changes in technology, locating cellphone callers won’t present the problem they do now. Future 911 operators will be able to tell automatically where a caller is located, down to finding the room inside a high-rise building a call come from. Pierce started as a police officer in the 1970s, when 911 didn’t exist at all. People in emergency situations either called the local sheriff’s office, the fire department or the local ambulance service. A 20-minute response time would have been considered fast in some rural areas, he said. Few people knew CPR and procedures to help people provide first aid over the phone often failed, Pierce said. Now, ChatComm can instantly dispatch a police officer who has first aid training skills and equipment. In Dunwoody and Brookhaven, medical and fire response services have to be transferred from ChatComm to DeKalb County. Former Councilman Danny Ross voted against Dunwoody’s switch to ChatComm four years ago, saying the one-button transfer takes too long. Ross said his solution four years ago would have been for Dunwoody to start its own emergency call center. “The transfer is the problem,” Ross said. “I voted against it because we couldn’t do the entire process. We should have our
own 911 system.” He said he tried to convince Brookhaven not to switch to ChatComm, which the city did a year ago. “I made a presentation to Brookhaven before they decided to go to ChatComm,” Ross said. “They have the same problem we do and they’ve just accepted that it will take a few minutes to transfer the call. They don’t have any plans to do
PHOTOS BY ELLEN ELDRIDGE
what Dunwoody is trying to work on.” Pierce called the Dunwoody-driven push to connect the Computer Aided Dispatch systems used by ChatComm and DeKalb an “above and beyond” measure. Engineers are currently working to fix an issue with the firewall. Another live test will be needed before the system can “go live,” Pierce said. When Pierce started with ChatComm six years ago, he sat down as a dispatcher. He said he “got bored” after retiring from law enforcement and took
Top left, Brittany Baxter, a ChatComm floor supervisor, left the restaurant industry to join the company as a dispatcher. Left, Stephen Pierce, an operations specialist with ChatComm, says an ability to multitask and handle rude people are skills crucial to taking 911 calls. Above, Vanessa Ollee, a ChatComm 911 dispatcher, handles police calls for Dunwoody.
up an opportunity to work at a private 911 call center. “I was blown away with the professionalism,” Pierce said. Brittany Baxter left the restaurant industry to join ChatComm as a dispatcher. Now, she’s the floor supervisor. She said the job helped prepare her for call taking. “The fast pace, you’ve got to get those pizzas out,” Baxter said. “That’s
what helped—having to do everything under pressure.” Pierce said her ability to multitask and to handle rude people gave her the experience needed to take 911 calls. “It takes a special person to be able to smile and do your job, and that’s the same way when you’re taking a 911 call,” Pierce said.
Dunwoody boys recognized for reporting fire BY ELLEN ELDRIDGE
elleneldridge@reporternewspapers.net
DeKalb County Fire Chief Darnell Fullum recognized two Dunwoody boys and their father for helping fight a June 30 fire. Public safety officials say to “see something, say something,” but Ethan and Brian Wittenton went an extra step and actually did something, too, Fullum said. “Your heroic actions helped save many lives that day and your efforts do not go unnoticed,” Fullum told the family when presenting the boys certificates of special recognition during the Dunwoody City Council on Sept. 28. Fullum said that in June, the boys were at a local bank with their father when Ethan spotted a fire outside a nearby building. Ethan was insistent with his father, who agreed to leave the bank and check it out, Fullum said. The fire was burning toward two large HVAC units near another building, so the father left his sons in the car and helped evacuate the building, Fullum said. The boys asked a lady who pulled up to call 911. Fullum said he learned from the father that the boys at some point got out of the car and helped to direct traffic. “I asked Brian who first spotted the fire and he said, ‘Ethan,’ so he continuously gave his little brother credit for this,” Fullum said. DUN
ELLEN ELDRIDGE
DeKalb County Fire Chief Darnel Fullum, left, and Dunwoody Mayor Mike Davis, right, recognized brothers Ethan, left center, and Brian Wittenton, right center, for reporting a fire outside a building. www.ReporterNewspapers.net |
OCT. 2 – OCT. 15, 2015 | 27
PUBLIC SAFETY
Police Blotter The following information was pulled from Dunwoody’s Police-toCitizen Portal Event Search website and is presumed to be accurate.
First
block of Perimeter Center East— On Sept. 13, robbery of a business with a gun was reported; On Sept. 21, a forcedentry burglary was reported at a residence.
On Sept. 17, burglary was reported. First
block of Perimeter Center East— On Sept. 17, burglary was reported.
block of Winters Chapel Road— On Sept. 20, a strong-arm robbery in the street was reported.
6600
1400 block of Dunwoody Village Park-
1400
5000
way—On Sept. 22, robbery of a business with a gun was reported.
BURGLA RY
block of Peachtree-Industrial Boulevard—On Sept. 21, burglary was reported. block of Perimeter Lofts Circle— On Sept. 21, burglary was reported.
AUTO TH EFT 100
11,000
block of Perimeter Trace—On Sept. 16, burglary was reported.
4800
block of Ashford-Dunwoody Road—On Sept. 16, burglary was reported. block of Olde Perimeter Way—
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block of Perimeter Center West—On Sept. 13, theft of a motor vehicle was reported.
4900
28
OCT. 2 – OCT. 15, 2015
100
11,000
4600
block of Peachtree Place Parkway—On Sept. 22, theft of a motor vehicle was reported.
3300
Theft/Larceny
7300
block of Ashford-Dunwoody Road—On Sept. 11, 13, 16, 19, 20, 22 and 25, shoplifting was reported and/or arrests were made; On Sept. 11, theft of articles from a vehicle was reported; On Sept. 19, pick-pocketing was reported.
4500
block of Ashford-Dunwoody Road—On Sept. 15, theft of articles from a vehicle was reported; On Sept. 20, larceny was reported.
4800
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block of Ashford Crossing—On Sept. 15, theft of articles from a vehicle was reported.
block of Perimeter Lofts Circle— On Sept. 21, theft of a motor vehicle was reported.
block of Ashford-Dunwoody Road—On Sept. 11, 17, 19, 20, 22 and 25, shoplifting was reported and/or arrests were made.
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block of Perimeter Center West— On Sept. 15, shoplifting was reported and an arrest was made.
2500
4400
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100
block of Winters Chapel Road— On Sept. 17, theft of a motor vehicle was reported.
block of Ashford-Dunwoody Road—On Sept. 11, 12, 14, 15, 17, 19 and 25, shoplifting was reported and/or arrests were made.
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block of Perimeter Center East— On Sept. 15, larceny from a building was reported; On Sept. 18, larceny from a building was reported.
block of Perimeter Center Place— On Sept. 16 and 20, shoplifting was Read more of the reported. Police Blotter online at www.reporternewspapers.net 5600 block of Trowbridge Way— On Sept. 16, larceny was reported.
4300
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block of Peachtree Place Parkway—On Sept. 12, larceny from a coin machine was reported.
First
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400
4600
ROBBERY
GAL 274
Sept. 11, simple assault was reported.
block of Asbury Commons—On Sept. 12, larceny from a building was reported; On Sept. 13, larceny from a building was reported.
From police reports dated Sept. 11-24
4500
building was reported.
block of Ashford-Dunwoody Road—On Sept. 17, theft of parts from a vehicle was reported.
4400
block of North Shallowford Road—On Sept. 11, larceny from a
| www.ReporterNewspapers.net
block of Drexel Way—On Sept. 16, theft of parts from a vehicle was reported. block of Perimeter Trace—On Sept. 16, theft of parts from a vehicle were reported. block of Asbury Square—On Sept. 18, theft of parts from a vehicle was reported. block of Perimeter Lofts Circle— On Sept. 18, theft of parts from a vehicle was reported.
8400
block of Perimeter Lofts Circle— On Sept. 18, theft of articles from a vehicle was reported.
200
block of Dunwoody Crossing— On Sept. 12, an arrest was made for battery of a family member.
10,000
block of Madison Drive—On Sept. 12, battery of a family member was reported.
6800
block of Peachtree-Industrial Boulevard—On Sept. 13 and 19, reports of simple assault and battery were made, and an arrest was made on Sept. 22.
100
block of Perimeter Center West— On Sept. 16, simple assault and battery was reported.
1100
block of Holly Avenue—On Sept. 16, simple assault and battery was reported and an arrest was made.
2100
block of Peachford Road—On Sept. 17, simple assault and battery was reported.
5000
block of Vernon Oaks Drive— On Sept. 17, simple assault was reported and an arrest was made.
4600
block of Ridgeview Road—On Sept. 18, aggravated assault and battery with a weapon was reported and an arrest was made.
4400
block of Ashford-Dunwoody Road—On Sept. 20, simple assault and battery was reported.
1500
block of Dunwoody Club Crossing—On Sept. 20, assault by intimidation was reported.
First
block of Peachford Circle—On Sept. 21, simple assault was reported.
Ashford-Dunwoody
Road at Perimeter Center West—On Sept. 21, aggravated assault and battery with a gun was reported.
4800
block of Twin Lakes Trail—On Sept. 22, family battery was reported.
block of Perimeter Center Parkway—On Sept. 19, theft of articles from a vehicle was reported.
9300
2300
block of Dunwoody Crossing— On Sept. 21, theft of articles from a vehicle was reported.
5200
6300
Fraud
block of Charleston Place—On Sept. 21, theft of articles from a vehicle was reported.
2100
block of Womack Road—On Sept. 22, larceny was reported.
4400
block of Chamblee-Dunwoody Road—On Sept. 24, shoplifting was reported.
AS S AULT 2000
block of Pernoshal Court—On
block of Peachford Circle—On Sept. 23, simple assault was reported. block of Wyntercreek Court— On Sept. 24, an arrest was made for simple assault and battery.
5500
block of Chamblee-Dunwoody Road—On Sept. 11 and 20, fraud by worthless check was reported.
2200
block of Dunwoody Crossing— On Sept. 11, fraud by swindle was reported.
First
block of Perimeter Center East— On Sept. 11, fraud was reported.
4700
block of Ashford-Dunwoody CONTINUED ON PAGE 30 DUN
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PUBLIC SAFETY
Dunwoody Police Blotter CONTINUED FROM PAGE 28
Road—On Sept. 11, fraud by worthless check was reported and an arrest was made.
cense; On Sept. 13, an arrest was made for suspended registration; On Sept. 16, an arrest was made for driving while unlicensed.
1900
4900
block of Stonehouse Court—On Sept. 11, credit fraud was reported.
1400
block of Carnaby Court—On Sept. 14, fraud by impersonation was reported.
block of Winters Chapel Road— On Sept. 13, an arrest was made for reckless driving.
block of Dunover Circle—On Sept. 22, credit fraud was reported.
Peachtree at Cotillion Drive— On Sept. 14, an arrest was made for DUI.
4500
300
4600
block of Tilly Mill Road—On Sept. 24, fraud by swindle was reported.
Arrests I-285
at Ashford-Dunwoody Road— On Sept. 11, 13 and 14, wanted persons were located and arrested; On Sept. 14, an arrest was made for possession of marijuana; On Sept. 19, an arrest was made for DUI; On Sept. 20, an arrest was made for reckless driving.
I-285 at Chamblee-Dunwoody Road—
On Sept. 11, an arrest was made for following too close; On Sept. 13, an arrest was made for driving without a license; On Sept. 23, a wanted person was located and arrested.
Winters
Chapel Road at Peachtree-Industrial Boulevard—On Sept. 12, an arrest was made for driving without a li-
North
block of Perimeter Center North—On Sept. 15, an arrest was made for possession of marijuana.
4600
block of Ashford-Dunwoody Road—On Sept. 15, a wanted person was located and arrested; On Sept. 17, an arrest was made for headlights required.
1500 block of Dunwoody Village Park-
way—On Sept. 16, an arrest was made for a loitering violation.
4300
block of North Peachtree at Cotillion Drive—On Sept. 17, an arrest was made for driving on a suspended or revoked license.
4400
block of Ashford-Dunwoody Road—On Sept. 17, a wanted person
was located and arrested; On Sept. 25, an arrest was made for driving while unlicensed.
was located and arrested; On Sept. 23, an arrest was made for possession of marijuana.
4600
block of Peachtree Place Parkway—On Sept. 17, an arrest was made for driving on a suspended registration.
First
4500
2100
block of Olde Perimeter Way— On Sept. 18, an arrest was made for possession of marijuana; On Sept. 22, an arrest was made for a loitering violation.
I-285
at North Peachtree Road—On Sept. 18, an arrest was made for driving while unlicensed.
100
block of Perimeter Center Place— On Sept. 18, a wanted person was located and arrested.
1800
block of Cotillion Drive—On Sept. 19, an arrest was made for possession of marijuana.
6800
block of Peachtree-Industrial Boulevard—On Sept. 20, an arrest was made for DUI.
2100
block of Cotillion Drive—On Sept. 20, an arrest was made for DUI.
6100
block of Madison Drive—On Sept. 21, an arrest was made for disorderly conduct under the influence.
4400
block of Chamblee-Dunwoody Road—On Sept. 22, a wanted person
block of Perimeter Center East— On Sept. 23, three arrests were made for probation violation. block of Mount Vernon Road— On Sept. 24, an arrest was made for DUI.
2000
block of Savoy Drive—On Sept. 24, an arrest was made for possession of marijuana.
1600
block of Madison Drive—On Sept. 25, an arrest was made for DUI.
OTHER 2100
block of Asbury Square—On Sept. 11, damage to private property was reported.
4600
block of Peachtree Place Parkway—On Sept. 12, damage to private property was reported.
I-285 at Peachtree Road—On Sept. 12,
damage to private property was reported.
4300
block of Ashford-Dunwoody Road—On Sept. 12 and 13, damage to private property was reported.
1200
block of Ashford Crossing—On Sept. 12, damage to private property was reported.
Reporter Classifieds HELP WANTED Beena Vision Systems, Inc. – Currently seeking Computer Vision Engineering Manager to: Mng. the coord. & overall integr. sfwr. prog. in RR ind. proj.; Dir., rev., or appr. proj. design changes & confer w/ mgmt., prod. or mktg. staff to disc. proj. specs. or proc.; Pres. & exp. proposals, rep., or fdng. to RR exec. & prof.; Consl. or neg. w/ clients to prep. proj. specs.; Prep. bdgts, bids, or contr. for exec. decs.; Dir. rcrmt., plmt, & eval. of software eng. & proj. staff; Dvlp. or impl. policies, stnds., or procd. for engg. proj. Must have Master’s deg. in Computer Science plus min. 6 mo of exp. in sfwr. dev. or its rel. and knwl. in MATLAB. Please send resume to 600 Pinnacle Ct, Ste 635, Norcross, GA, 30071. House Cleaners Needed – Merry Maids of Roswell now hiring full-time house cleaners! Paid weekly, benefits available after 90 days, Tues. – Sat. schedule, no nights, uniforms provided. Must have vehicle, valid driver’s license, auto insurance and be able to pass background check & drug screen. To apply, please call 770-552-7114.
Now accepting applications for all positions at our new location opening soon in the Perimeter Mall area. You can apply in person at 305 Brookhaven Ave., Atlanta, GA 30319 Mon-Fri 9am-6pm or online at www.newks.com
SERVICES AVAILABLE Driveways & Walkways – Replaced or repaired. Masonry, grading, foundations repaired, waterproofing and retaining walls. Call Joe Sullivan 770-616-0576.
CEMETERY PLOTS
CLEANING SERVICES
Arlington Memorial Park Sandy Springs – Two spaces in the Garden of Roses (Section D - Lot 42B). Side by Side, $2000 single or $3500 both. Call Karen Brock, 256-2440203 or email: kjbrock1991@aol.com.
Rosie’s Cleaning Services – Apartments, homes and offices. 13 years experience, move-in or move-out. Free estimate. 678914-8878.
Arlington Memorial Park – 2 Prime lots in Lakeside. Asking $17,000. Call 912-6950094.
Just call Hazel Cleaning Service – Free quotes. Excellent references. 404-695-5986
LANDSCAPING SERVICES North Georgia Lawn Care – Honest, affordable, dependable and Free estimates. Call Tony 404-402-5435. Tranquil Waters Lawn Care - Pressure washing, aerating, flower beds, trimming, tree/shrubs installation, hauling of debris, etc. Free estimates, Discounts for Seniors & Veterans. No contracts needed. Call Mike 678-662-0767 or Andrew 678-672-8552
Reporter Classifieds can work for you 30
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Detail Cleaning Services – Houses, apartments, offices and more. Affordable prices excellent references. I will beat any advertised price. Call 770-837-5711.
House Cleaning Service – Fast & Affordable. Call Ellie 404-903-2913. Will do laundry also – ask for rates.
REAL ESTATE SERVICES FREE BOOK on Selling Goods due to downsizing/estate settlement. Only 80 available. Call MaxSold Downsizing/Estate Services at 404-260-1471, email easy@ maxsold.com or claim online at MaxSold. com/book by Nov.15
WINDOWS & SIDING Offering vinyl, wood and composite windows – All types of siding. Factorytrained installation. Family-owned, Familypriced. Angie’s List ‘A’ Rated. BBB ‘A+’. 33 Years In Business. Quinn Windows & Siding. 770-939-5634. DUN
Home Services Directory Appliance Repair ALL WORK GUARANTEED
Call Kevin 24/7 770.885.9210
• All Major Appliances & Brands FREE Service • Stoves, Ovens, Dishwashers • Refrigerators, Disposals Call with • Washers, Dryers Repair or $25 Service • 30 Years Experience Charge Servicing All of Metro Atlanta
North Georgia Lawn Care Honest Affordable Dependable Free estimates
To Advertise, call 404-917-2200 ext 110
Trash, Junk Hauled For Less
35 – $150
$
per load
Oriental Rug Cleaning
We will pick up appliances, furniture, tree limbs, construction debris, basement and foreclosure clean-outs.
Call James
cell (404) 784-5142 home (770) 455-6237
Bennett Painting & Remodeling, LLC. Commercial/Industrial/Residential
$ One pe
• Most Air-Cooled Models In Stock and Ready To Install • Most Air-Cooled Models In • Automatic Standby Generators Stock Ready To Install • Most Air-Cooled Models In • Automatic Standby Generators Stock Air-Cooled Ready To Install • Most Models In (770) 251-9765 • Automatic Standby Generators
(770) 251-9765
Stock Ready To Install www.generatorstore.com www.generatorstore.com • Automatic Standby Generators (770) 251-9765
(770) 251-9765
Licensed Insured
get
Free Estimates
404-875-2299 www.imbrexroofing.com
Locally Owned Since 1997
Polished.
With two professional in-house polishers, we can make your silver flatware, tea sets, bowls, and trays more beautiful than ever before. Bring it by or call us for an estimate today and get polished for the holidays! Missing A Piece of Your Pattern? ® 1,200 patterns in stock.
404.261.4009 / 800.270.4009
3164 Peachtree Rd, NE Atlanta, GA 30305 sterlingsilver@beverlybremer.com www.beverlybremer.com
Ronnie Bennett 404-432-0385 bennettpaint56@att.net
Best of Atlanta Award 2014 YOUR NEIGHBORHOOD ROOFING COMPANY
Commercial & Residential Junk Removal Recycling 770-399-6605 www.justtrashit.com
Wallcovering, Special Coatings, Pressure Washing
Antique and Decorative Rugs since 1976
Pre-screened Providers. Pre-negotiated Rates.
justTRASHit!
EST 1975
Oriental Rug Shop
www.generatorstore.com
• Roofing • Gutters • Painting
™
FF
This A d
404-467-8242 • 3255-5 Peachtree Road NE, Atlanta GA 30305
www.generatorstore.com
470-222-4369 housedox.com
With
In the heart of Buckhead
n utpomoer o c s 5 0 r cu
Call Tony 404-402-5435
HVAC, Plumbing, Carpet Cleaning, Pest Control, Moving Services & More
15% O
Antique Repair Specialist • Speciality Care Hand Wash Cleaning (front and back with plenty of water) • No Chemicals Used Air Dried, Scotch Guard • Mothproof, Padding, Storage Appraisal & Insurance Statements • Pickup and Delivery Available
Belco Electric
• Family Owned since 1972 • Fast, Dependable Service by Professional, Uniformed Electricians
770-455-4556
Check out our new website www.BelcoInc.com and follow us on
A+ Angie’s List
5548 Peachtree Ind. Blvd Chamblee, GA 30341 404-995-8400 1.5 miles inside 285 in Chamblee Plaza
www.PersianRugParadise.net
Window Cleaning Atlanta’s Premier
• Window Cleaning • Gutter Cleaning • Pressure Washing • Family Owned • Licensed and Insured • FREE ESTIMATES
since 1968
404.355.1901
www.WindowCleanAtl.com
Skilled Handymen at Your Service
ELF Home Improvement & Repair • Kitchens • Decks • Bathroom • Fences • Windows • Doors • Electrical • Plumbing • Various Repairs
Call for an Estimate! Ed Fulcher • 678-630-4543 Mark McCoy • 404-542-2495
Handyman Services
moving & delivery too! No job too small References Available 470-545-8408 Cell/803-608-0792 Cornell Davis, Owner
% 20 OFF
Cleaning & Repair of All Rugs
With coupon. One per family.
APPLIANCE REPAIR 100% GUARANTEED ALL MAJOR BRANDS CALL TODAY! www.ApexApplianceAtlanta.com
404.579.0064
The Handyman Can • Plumbing • Electrical • Sheetrock • Floors • Tile • Framing • Kitchens • Painting • Roofwork • Concrete • Stained Glass • Antique Door Restoration as well as many other issues...
John Salvesen • 404-453-3438 thehandymancanatlanta@gmail.com
Your home. Our help.
Get help around the house by calling one of our Home Services and Services Available advertisers. Tell them you saw their ad in Reporter Newspapers! DUN
www.ReporterNewspapers.net |
OCT. 2 – OCT. 15, 2015 | 31
Saturday
4th Annual
october
10th 12pm - 6PM Brookhaven Park ( Brookhaven, Ga 30319 Corner of Peachtree & Osborne
Chili tasting starts at 12pm while supplies last FREE FAMILY FRIENDLY FESTIVAL IN HEART OF BROOKHAVEN LIVE MUSIC WITH BATTLEFIELD COLLECTIVE, DRUCKER & BEHIND THE SUN (RED HOT CHILI PEPPERS TRIB) ICE COLD BEER AND LIBATIONS TO COOL YOU OFF PORTION OF PROCEEDS BENEFITS RELEASH ATLANTA $2500 IN CASH PRIZES FOR AMATEURS
(
4158 Peachtree Rd. NEW LOCATION
@
SIGN YOUR TEAM UP NOW
www.BrookhavenChiliCookOff.com 70+ CHILI TEAMS: AMATEUR & RESTAURANT DIVISIONS
6 DIVISIONS:
BEST CHILI AMATEURS, BEST CHILI RESTAURANTS, COME WIN BRAGGING RIGHTS, BEST STEW RESTAURANTS, BEST STEW AMATEURS, PLAQUES, MEDALS, PRIZES BEST MOST SPIRITED TEAM & PEOPLE'S CHOICE AWARD AND MORE
Automotive Group
32
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OCT. 2 – OCT. 15, 2015 | www.ReporterNewspapers.net
DUN