Home Blog Page 40

SafePath Hearing Children’s Voices Gala

SafePath Children’s Advocacy Center is hosting the annual Hearing Children’s Voices Gala at Truist Park on Saturday, August 16, 2025. The evening features food and drinks in an elegant atmosphere complete with speakers, fun events, and an auction featuring generously donated items. Proceeds will support SafePath’s intervention, advocacy, therapeutic and medical services for abused children and their families.

Gala Experience

Guests can mingle while enjoying gourmet hors d’oeuvres and signature cocktails. Event chairs Lisa and Sam Olens together with Lily and Chris Wasserman will welcome the 350 plus attendees. A fundraising goal of two hundred fifty thousand dollars will help maintain Cobb County’s reputation as home to one of the nation’s most effective child advocacy centers.

Theme and Attire

Every year features a new theme for the event. This year’s theme Let Go, Give Hope invites attendees to dress in their finest evening wear inspired by Frozen. Black tie is also optional for those wishing to add a touch of royal elegance. Frozen fans will feel right at home as queen and princess motifs blend with formal gowns and tuxedos.

Guest Speaker

Michael Register, Director of the Cobb County Department of Public Safety, will deliver this year’s SafePath Inspiration address. He will share his compelling childhood journey and discuss the importance of safeguarding young voices.

How to Support

Sponsorships are available and individual tickets are priced at two hundred fifty dollars per guest. Those unable to attend can participate in the online auction, contribute an item for the auction, or make an online donation. Every gift helps SafePath continue its mission of protecting vulnerable children.

Date:
August 16, 2025

Time:
6 pm to 10 pm

Admission:
$250/person

Address:
Truist Park
755 Battery Avenue Southeast
Atlanta GA 30339

For more information, please contact SafePath Children’s Advocacy Center at (770) 801-3465 or info@safepath.org.

About SafePath

SafePath Children’s Advocacy Center Inc is a private nonprofit dedicated to reducing trauma for children involved in abuse investigations. The organization brings together law enforcement, district attorneys, therapists, healthcare professionals and social services in one child-friendly setting.

Enhancing Student Opportunities in 3D

Cobb schools, both public and private, are offering the technology to students as well. The Cobb County School District, for instance, has 3D printers that are used for engineering and technology classes in 12 middle schools, Campbell Middle, Daniell Middle and Simpson Middle just to name a few; and three high schools utilized the technology for engineering course: Lassiter, Pope and Wheeler. Printers are also available at Tritt, Clay, King Springs and Keheley elementary schools. Students use them for projects like a left/right brain model for a science fair experiment, making objects that interact with a robot and creating the shapes of continents for first-graders.

At The Walker School in Marietta, Dr. Nate Brady says the school’s first 3D printer was actually assembled by a student. “One of our students was interested in it, so we purchased the kit and let the student put it all together and got it working,” he says. Brady teaches AP Physics and an Honors Electricity and Magnetism course to high school students.

The two printers at Walker are mostly used in Brady’s engineering class. At the end of the year, students are responsible for designing a project on the computer, creating a prototype and printing out the object. “One of the group projects was a manual dog feeder,” Brady recalls. “They developed part of a timer. They modeled the feeder in SketchUp, a 3D modeling software, and then printed it on the 3D printer … It was a really cool project.”

Walker School freshmen Chandler Hanke (left) and Ella Richardson printing "Best Friends" puzzle pieces.
Walker School freshmen Chandler Hanke (left) and Ella Richardson printing “Best Friends” puzzle pieces.

High school students mostly use their printers, but Brady says there have been a few middle school students who have tried the technology. A lower school teacher is also looking at purchasing one for her elementary classes. “It’s been great having access to this technology, especially for our students,” he says. “For instance, one of my advisory students recently lost the mouthpiece to her trumpet and we just printed out a new mouthpiece. She put it in and it worked fine. It’s just really great to have the opportunity to make things when you need them. But outside of class, I also recently had a student whose grandfather worked on a battleship for a while, so the student designed the battleship and printed out a two-scale model of the battleship. It’s been great for our students to be able to come in, design and build these kinds of things.”

Brady adds that it’s important for Walker students to learn how to utilize 3D printers because they are becoming almost mandatory for anyone looking to pursue a career in engineering. “Pretty much any product has been designed on the computer and printed on a 3D printer, so for our students to be able to experience that in high school is just phenomenal,” he concludes.

Business on Tap

Craft breweries and community beer growler shops have been popping up all over metro Atlanta, and Cobb County is no exception. Home to both small-time and big-league brewing businesses, Cobb’s beer industry is showing no signs of going flat.

Red Hare Brewing, Cobb’s largest brewery, just this year completed an expansion to encompass a more than 17,000-square-foot space in Marietta, making it the third-largest craft brewery in Georgia, now brewing about 15,000 barrels of beer per year — the equivalent of 822,000 six packs. Part of the expansion included a 2,000-square-foot tasting room and an outdoor beer garden, which is open to the public Wednesdays through Fridays from 5:30-7 p.m., and Saturdays, 2-6 p.m.

red-hare-brewing-tap-room

“Now we can brew more beer and that gives us room to do more experimenting. You can expect to see a lot more brews coming out of our brewery over the next few months. It also will give the space needed to fill in our market footprint,” says Red Hare owner Roger Davis, adding that Red Hare looks to add Alabama and the Gulf Coast of Florida to its distribution list this year, which currently spans Georgia, South Carolina and Tennessee.

Beer is about home and a familiar place, Davis adds, and Cobb is where he has called home for 12 years; also serving as an active member of the community, as well as a board member for the Gateway Marietta Community Improvement District.

“As craft beer is all about local, there was never another choice to build the brewery in Cobb,” Davis says. “The City of Marietta also played a big part. When we started in 2011, the economy was pretty depressed. Marietta gave us help and motivation to put our plan in place.”

 

 

 

Beer Fun Facts

  • Research from the Brewers Association indicates that in the U.S. brewery openings exceeded two a day in 2015.
  • In 2015, IPA remained the top style sold by independent craft brewers, and continues to grow faster than the overall craft category.
  • Data shows that “locally made” is important to more than half of craft beer buyers.
  • Similarly, knowing that a small and independent brewery makes the beer is important to a majority of craft drinkers in their purchase decision.

American Craft Council Show

The American Craft Council Show features hundreds of the country’s top fine craft artists presenting their latest handmade creations in jewelry, clothing, furniture and home décor. The Show draws nearly 10,000 visitors during its three-day event, and is a unique opportunity to experience the works of hundreds of the country’s most talented craft makers under one roof.

Top Players in Fine Art Come to Cobb

One of many area artists featured in the 26th annual American Craft Council Show  (ACC) at the Cobb Galleria Center the first week of March is east Cobb resident and ceramic artist Beth J. Tarkington. She has participated in the yearly show for about a decade. “I choose to do the ACC shows because they represent the top players in the fine craft field,” Tarkingson says. “There are so many amazing artists doing these shows, from all over the country. They are strongly juried, which makes them hard to get into, which just makes getting in even more special. There is no doubt in my mind that it is the top-level show in Atlanta and, beyond that, in the Southeast.”

On top of that, Tarkington says that the American Craft Council is deeply committed to educating people in the fine crafts and supporting the fine craft communities and individual artists and their work. “What I personally enjoy most about participating in any show is connecting to my audience, watching people respond to my work, or not!” she adds. “Hearing their comments and sharing all of this with other artists.”

As an artist, she was personally encouraged by Debra Fritts, a well-known ceramic artist from Roswell, to pursue her unique approach to ceramics by transferring her drawing and painting skills from paper and canvas to the clay surface. “My work is very narrative; pieces tell stories, pursue themes,” Tarkington says. “My work is hand built, which means I do not use a potter’s wheel. It’s a slower process, each piece is one-of-a-kind. You’ll never see rows and rows of pieces in my studio! But I absolutely love using the clay colorants—slips, stains, under glazes, glazes in a very painterly fashion.”

Her career as a full-time ceramic artist began after spending 16 years teaching art at the high school level. Tarkington earned degrees from the University of Georgia and Georgia State University with an emphasis on drawing and painting and surface design. She and her husband live in the Atlanta Country Club, where her studio is also located.

This year’s show will be held March 11, 2016 from 10 am to 8 pm; March 12, 2016 from 10 am to 6 pm; and March 13, 2016 from 11 am to 5 pm. Advance show tickets are $12 On-site admission is $13 per day. Children 12 and under and American Craft Council members get in free. Tickets may be purchased ahead of time at craftcouncil.org/atlanta.

Date:
March 11, 2016 from 10 am to 8 pm
March 12, 2016 from 10 am to 6 pm
March 13, 2016 from 11 am to 5 pm

Admission:
Advance show tickets are $12 per day.
On-site admission is $13 per day.

Address:
Cobb Galleria Centre
2 Galleria Parkway
Atlanta, GA 30339

Parking:
Free Galleria parking

For more information, please call 800-836-3470.

Guns and Growlers

The Marietta Museum of History is hosting the annual Guns and Growlers event on March 11, 2016.  The evening event is geared towards those who appreciate fine craftsmanship of weapons and beer. The event is a fundraising effort for the museum and a chance to highlight their world class gun collection.

Growlers on tap will be provided by Schoolhouse Beer and Brewing and delicious southern food will be catered in. Guest experts on guns and beer will be on hand to answer questions and a special selection of guns from their 200+ antique gun collection will be out of the exhibits for a closer look.

All guests will receive a swag bag full of promotional items from their sponsors and a limited edition beer glass commemorating the event. New this year they will also have a silent auction with multiple unique items including a Glock pistol of choice.

Date:
March 11, 2016

Hours:
5 pm to 8 pm

Admission:
$30 per person

Address:
1 Depot St #200
Marietta, GA 30060

For more information, please call (770) 794-5710 or visit www.MariettaHistory.org

As the flyer suggests, "Sure to be a bad awesome time" and you could win a glock "pisotl" of choice! Beer and guns - what could possibly go wrong?

Making a Great Impression

Like much of the nation, Cobb County has been on an economic roller coaster ride the past 10 years, experiencing ups in the early 2000s with a booming housing market and commercial construction, followed by a challenging dip around 2008 and the years that followed as a result of the Great Recession. But, that hasn’t stopped Cobb from continuing to grow — the area has managed to slowly rebound, and that is obvious in the county’s steady population increases (about 70,000 residents since 2005), expansions in the highway and interstate systems, downtown improvements in Cobb’s municipalities, introduction of the Atlanta Braves development and much more.

Over the past decade in Marietta, approximately 25 subdivisions were built with homes valued between $200,000 and $600,000 each; the city received the coveted “All-American City” nod in 2006 from the National Civic League; the Gateway Marietta Community Improvement District was created in 2014 to help establish the area as one of the premier business centers in metro Atlanta; and in 2013, Marietta voters passed a $68 million redevelopment bond to be spent on the Franklin Road Corridor and aid in revitalization.

Marietta Mayor Steve Tumlin, who is serving in his sixth year as city leader, says he is most proud of the community’s streetscape improvements and how they are making a great impression on the entrances to Marietta, in addition to the parks and Marietta Square improvements. “One can tell a difference when they cross into the city limits with the improved roads, street lamps, brick walls and crosswalks,” he says, adding that in looking forward, he continues to envision a balance of growth in the arts, schools (public and independent) and continued enhancement of the city’s infrastructure, parks and gateways.

Creating a ‘Mature’ Transportation System

One of the more obvious examples of change in Cobb over the past decade that millions see as they ride throughout the area is in the county’s highway and interstate system. A major undertaking that began last year and will continue another few years is the Georgia Department of Transportation’s $834 million Northwest Corridor Express Lanes project. This construction will add 29.7 miles of reversible toll lanes along Interstate 75 from Akers Mill Road to Hickory Grove Road and along Interstate 575 from I-75 to Sixes Road in Cherokee County. The project is expected to improve traffic flow along this corridor, which becomes congested throughout the workweek during rush hour traffic, and it should increase options for motorists and individuals using transit and registered vanpools.

But residents and visitors taking routes off I-75 will notice what the Cobb Department of Transportation has recently completed and continues to work on to improve the highway and road system in the area. Faye DiMassimo, CDOT director for nearly six years now, says that with the area being home to more than 700,000 residents, 30,000 businesses, numerous Fortune 500 companies and institutions, the county is vibrant and diverse, thus the need to provide multiple transportation options. “While portions of Cobb are developed and becoming more urban, other areas embrace a quiet, suburban charm,” she says. “With a unique mix of powerful economic expansion, natural recreation opportunities and ever-growing entertainment options, exciting things are happening in Cobb.

“Cobb County’s transportation system is mature and includes not only an extensive network of over 5,000 roads, 440 bridges and culverts and 536 traffic signals but our Regional Traffic Management Center (TMC), Cobb International Airport-McCollum Field and Cobb Community Transit (which is celebrating 25 years in operation and is the second largest system in Georgia behind MARTA, serving just under 4 million trips annually). Our TMC’s advanced technology provides excellent situation awareness in incident management, inclement weather and event management and exceptional system operational efficiencies,” she says.

DiMassimo adds that Cobb’s continued growth and prosperity will require focus on how to address the needs of the Cobb Parkway corridor. Already among the highest volume corridors, traffic volumes on Cobb Parkway are forecast to grow 18-63 percent between 2010 and 2040, depending upon location along the road; and 60 percent of the 700,000-plus people in Cobb live within 5 miles of Cobb Parkway today.

Population is forecast to grow 62 percent from 2015 to 2040 for a 1-mile wide corridor along the route, while employment is forecast to grow 32 percent. “Our evolving vision is always anchored by strong partnerships with our cities, CIDs, GDOT and federal partners’ creative, proactive approaches to ‘best fit’ funding strategies, and making certain that the infrastructure supports developing economic activity and mobility needs,” DiMassimo concludes.

Currently, one of the major CDOT projects includes the Atlanta Braves/Windy Hill Road.  High crash rates and heavy congestion on Windy Hill Road, in addition to development of the new Braves stadium, are reasons for this nearly three-year, five-project, estimated $48 million SPLOST construction project. Once complete, it should provide motorists with enhanced safety, lower crash rates, better traffic flow, increased efficiency and improved pedestrian facilities. One major project within this is the “Windy Hill Diverging Diamond Interchange” at the I-75 overpass. Construction began in October 2014 and should be complete in early 2017.

More Arts Options and Increasing Safety Education

Taking two years and 1.1 million man hours to construct, the Cobb Energy Performing Arts Centre was one of the newest additions to Cobb County’s art scene in the last 10 years, and a large piece of the area’s continued efforts to offer more art options for its residents and visitors. “As a major regional asset, the Cobb Energy Centre is an economic engine and stimulus for the metropolitan area and the southeast,” says Michael S. Taormina, CFE and managing director for the past nine years.

Completed on time in 2007 and under budget at $145 million, the CEPAC provides a world-class, 2,750-seat state-of-the-art performing arts venue in metro Atlanta and is home to The Atlanta Opera, Atlanta Ballet, national concerts, comedy and touring Broadway shows. Even in its eighth year, Taormina says the number of shows and quality CEPAC presents to its visitors is first-class. An example of that is in the annual Radio City Music Hall Rockettes performances: The group is recognized as a leader throughout the industry with more than 200 performances per year.

Taormina adds that through the ArtsBridge Foundation, a CEPAC nonprofit program, they have hosted more than 280,000 students and teachers for live performances of opera, ballet and symphonic music since 2007. The annual Georgia High School Musical Theatre Awards, also known as “The Shuler’s,” also attracts more than 3,000 student and teachers throughout the state to the performance hall annually. “The arts have and continue to be a vital part of vibrant live, work and play community, now and for future generations,” he says.

Also opened in the last 10 years and serving as the only one in Georgia and one of 14 in the United States, the Cobb County Safety Village serves all of Cobb and surrounding areas with an interactive safety facility. Built on an eight-acre site in Marietta off Al Bishop Drive and paid for through county funds and sponsorships, the safety education building and safety village have improved the quality and effectiveness of the area’s school children’s safety education since opening in 2009, says Safety Village Director Allison Carter. “Today, the Safety Village educates every Cobb County student in kindergarten, second and fourth grade. The instructors, made up of five firefighters and two police officers, go out to every kindergarten class in the county and do a one-hour program of friendly fire fighter, ‘Stop, Drop and Roll’ and helmet safety,” Carter adds. “All second- and fourth-grade students come to the Safety Village — approximately 21,000 students per school year.”

The curriculum includes topics such as fire and life safety, senior safety, “Stranger Danger,” gun safety, bullying prevention, Internet safety, school bus safety and much, much more. “The Cobb County Safety Village Foundation believes that education is the key to reducing risk and protecting our community,” Carter says. “As adults, we can easily recall unique learning experiences we had as children. Research confirms that knowledge gained through hands-on learning remains with us far longer than simple presentations of facts.”

The Safety Village, which operates year-round, is sponsored by the business community. “Cobb EMC, Cobb & Douglas Public Health, WellStar Health System and Colonial Pipeline have designed and built interactive buildings that we use to educate our students on electrical safety, ‘Call Before you Dig 811,’ interative health and injury prevention modules,” Carter says. “We have also had support from MetroAtlanta Ambulance Services that sponsored our open air amphitheater, Marietta Kiwanis sponsored our Kennesaw Mountain replica and Lockheed Martin is building a hangar.” In addition, Walton Communities constructed a two-story apartment complex, which is the first building in their residential area; and Green Power EMC donated and installed a six-panel solar panel. The next additions to come out of the ground will be their Public Safety Fire and Police buildings and our school building.

Learn more about the CEPAC, Safety Village and other community and road improvements by visiting each city’s websites, in addition to cobbenergycentre.com, cobbcounty.org/safetyvillage, dot.ga.gov and cobbcounty.org/dot.

Building for a Bright Future

Educating the whole child is about more than a well-balanced curriculum, but also providing a safe and up-to-date location for a child to learn, in addition to innovative programs that help a young person excel throughout their elementary, middle and high school years. That being said, a number of Cobb County’s independent and public schools have some improvements to buildings and program options that were recently completed, prepping students for a great school year, and are still underway, setting the stepping stones for the schools’ futures.

mt-bethel-christian-academy-atrium

At Mt. Bethel Christian Academy in East Cobb, ninth and 10th-graders are enjoying its newly renovated North Campus at 2509 Post Oak Road in Marietta. Purchased in June 2014, Head of School Jim Callis says renovations to the 33-acre property, formerly known as Shirley Blumenthal Park, were completed in May. Constructed by Gay Construction, renovations include classrooms and a two-story rustic wood-beamed foyer and commons; office space; two science labs; a performing arts studio; visual art studio; student conference center; dining hall with full commercial kitchen; fully equipped fitness center; newly renovated gymnasium with retractable seating; a six-lane, 25-meter pool; four new tennis courts and athletic fields. The academy will continue to grow the North Campus, adding grades through 12th grade. In addition, it is on track to be the only faith-based, college-preparatory K-12 private school in east Cobb.

Also in Marietta, The Walker School closed on approximately 18 acres of contiguous property off Allgood Road in November 2014. Shelly Manuel, Walker’s director of advancement, says the Board of Trustees approved a long-range campus master plan developed by Mike Mascheri of Chapman Coyle Chapman & Associates Architects AIA Inc. in March. The school is currently working on the first phase of development to enhance academic, arts and athletics facilities. Details about the property will be released at a later date.

Accommodating Growth

Students attending schools in the Cobb County School District are seeing ongoing construction or recently completed construction as they headed back to school this August. At Wheeler High School, for example, which completed a major rebuild a few years ago, a new gymnasium and performing arts theater valued at a total of $23 million is under construction and scheduled for completion in January. Just a few miles east of Wheeler, students at Walton High are expected to be attending classes in a brand new school by fall 2017. The four-story, 143-classroom building is estimated to cost about $48 million and is funded by SPLOST IV.

“Walton’s current campus is just so disaggregated and needed to be refreshed,” says Cobb Schools Superintendent Chris Ragsdale. “Being that it’s on a 43-acre plot, there is a significant challenge, but when we finish construction, we will have a much more beneficial campus, more utilization of the campus.” He adds that during construction, no students will be displaced, nor will portable units have to be installed on campus to serve as classrooms.

The Marietta High School Blue Devils football team will be playing in a new stadium this fall. Northcutt Stadium, originally dedicated in 1940, underwent $11 million in renovations. These include an improved visitor’s side bleachers and raised walkway, main crosswalk of the home side stands and the interior of the restroom facility on the visitor side. Construction was necessary to modernize and improve Northcutt and the surrounding area with needed capital improvements. The board-approved cost is being funded through SPLOST IV and the district’s Building Fund. Construction began in November 2014 and was completed just before the first game of 2015.

To learn more about each school’s projects and programs, be sure to visit district and individual independent school websites. Details related to construction dates, as well as costs and contractors, may be available.

Pops In The Park

East Cobb Park is hosting an evening under the stars featuring Pops in the Park on Saturday, May 7th at 7 pm. The concert is free for those who choose to sit on the park lawn. Reserved table rentals are available for a fee.

The concert features music from Star Wars/Tribute to John Williams, Beatles, What’s Up at the Symphony, Gershwin by George!, Sound of Music, I Dreamed a Dream, Take Five, What a Wonderful World, Cinema Paradiso, Somewhere in Time, Mission Impossible, James Bond, Eagles, Ashokan Farewell, Phantom of the Opera, Whitney Houston, and Lord of the Dance

Date:
Saturday, May 7, 2016 at 7 pm

Admission:
Free admission / table rental available for a fee

Address:
East Cobb Park
3322 Roswell Road
Marietta, GA 30068

Parking:
Free

For more information, please call (205) 907-5030 or visit sotspopsinthepark.eventbrite.com

Black History Program

Marietta City Councilman Anthony Coleman is hosting the annual Black History Program on February 28, 2016 at the Old Zion Heritage Museum.  The event works in conjunction with the Old Zion Heritage Museum and also features speaker Rev. Kenneth Marcus, the Senior Pastor of Turner Chapel AME Church.  Also included in the program are honors for Cobb County’s African American elected officials who have working towards the betterment of Cobb County.

Date:
Sunday, February 28, 2016

Time:
3 pm

Admission:
Free

Address:
Old Zion Heritage Museum
165 Lemon Street
Marietta, GA 30060

For more information, please call (770) 427-8749 or visit www.zbcmarietta.org.

Piedmont Church donates $15,000 to local schools

Representatives from 26 schools pose with staff at Piedmont Church to celebrate the donation of more than $15,000 from proceeds of the 2015 Christmas at Piedmont event held in December.

Piedmont Church passed out more than $15,000, to local schools and through scholarships from proceeds of their annual Christmas at Piedmont event.

Principals from local schools, Piedmont Church members and sponsors were on hand Tuesday, February 3, 2016 to give back to the northeast Cobb community. “We just love to support our schools, they are such an important part of our community.” said Ike Reighard, Senior Pastor of Piedmont Church.

With the help from presenting sponsor, Superior Plumbing, 26 schools received donations and seven $500 scholarships were named after some great families who have made a huge impact in our community to Kell and Sprayberry High Schools. “My husband Roy and I are honored and humbled to have a scholarship named for us at Sprayberry high school.” said Barbara Stiglich, Facilities Coordinator at Piedmont Church. “We could never have imagined all the blessings we have received by simply serving in the community, we’ve enjoyed it every step of the way.”

A new scholarship was created this year named the Lester E. Crowell, Jr., Three-13 Salon, Spa & Boutique Cosmetology Scholarship for Sprayberry high school.

Christmas at Piedmont was held at Piedmont Church December 11, and 12, 2015. The two-day event featured more than 50 arts and crafts vendors as well as a huge kids zone including a petting zoo and a 40-foot snow tube slide provided by C&S Paving. All the kids activities were free and more than 25 schools and local dance troops performed as part of the free entertainment. All the proceeds from the event were funneled back in to the community and passed out at Piedmont Church at this special presentation.