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SERV 5K Global Walk and Run

SERV International 5K Global Hunger Walk and Run will bring together runners and walkers from across the world to help fight hunger. No matter what country, city, town or village, participants will all walk/run at the same time, Saturday, May 30th, 2015 at 8am EST, USA. Atlanta, Georgia residents will kick off this event in Marietta Square, 205 Lawrence St NE Marietta, GA 30060. Hosted by Mike Stoudt and Heidi Rew, the post race festivities includes music by DJ Scott, the Awards Ceremony, Sponsorship Village and the Marietta Farmers Market. Interested runners and walkers can register at https://serv5kglobalhungerwalkrun.itsyourrace.com/register/

SERV International was founded in 2000 and gives people the opportunity to make a difference via food, water, shelter and life by building connections with communities in both Kenya and the Dominican Republic and serving nutrient-rich meals to millions of people. SERV shares the love of God and meets the communities most urgent needs, providing meals, clean water and safe shelter. This is not a one time visit, SERV keeps going back to make a difference.

Date:
May 30, 2015 from 8am to 10am

Admission:
April 2 – May 28; Teams of 10 or more are $20 each; $35 Same Day Fee, May 30th. The price includes T-shirt, and post race event. There is no charge for international runners however donations are welcome.

Address:
Marietta Square
205 Lawrence St NE
Marietta, GA 30060

Parking:
Around the square or in public parking garage

For more information, please call 770-516-1108 or visit https://serv5kglobalhungerwalkrun.itsyourrace.com/register/

FURever Fest

Cobb Animal Control will be hosting its semi-annual FURever Fest on Saturday, May 19, 2018 from 10-4pm at the animal shelter. This fun, free, family event will feature vendors with animal related businesses, services, and organizations that provide education and information on responsible pet ownership as well as having products for sale that can be used for your pets to enhance the experience of adopting a pet and being a pet parent.

Register for FREE to be entered to WIN A BASKET. They are filled with goodies your pet will love! Select EITHER Dog or Cat Raffle.
https://fureverfestspring2018.eventbrite.com

Top Dog Boutique is donating TWO pet baskets (one dog basket valued at over $150 and one cat basket valued at over $75) to be raffled off on Saturday.

Register to be entered to WIN A BASKET. They are filled with goodies your pet will love! Select EITHER Dog or Cat Raffle.

You are allowed to enter in only one raffle. Duplicate registrations will be deleted.

Fun, free, family event featuring vendors and organizations that help promote responsible pet ownership. The FURever Fest is held as part of CCAS’s continuing efforts through public awareness and to work closely with the community to find more fur-ever homes for the homeless and abandoned animals that come into the shelter.

The “Kid’s BOOK NOOK” tent has been added featuring local authors of books written for kids. The books feature pets and hopefully will help make the connection that reading is an important life lesson fostered through their love of their pets.

Top Dog Boutique has 2 locations: 2615 George Busbee Pkwy, Kennesaw and 900 Mansell Road, Roswell. They believe in treating pets as members of the family and promise to provide everything you need for your pet to live a healthy, holistic, and pampered life.

Date:
Sat, May 19, 2018
10 am to 4 pm

Admission:
Free

Address:
Cobb County Animal Services
1060 Al Bishop Drive
Marietta, GA 30008

Parking:
Free, On-Site

For more information, please call 770-590-5608 or visit https://fureverfestspring2018.eventbrite.com

Mike Whittle

mike-whittle

Mike Whittle

Florist, Founder of K. Mike Whittle Designs Inc.

The Story: At 13 years old, I sold my first arrangement in a floral shop after asking a local florist if she wanted to buy cattails I picked from a retention pond near my home. I guess God knew that I really couldn’t afford to go to school for any kind of formal training, so he gave me the talent that I have today. After working at a flower shop in Carrollton, the opportunity came available to lease the old Clarke Library building next to Mayes-Ward Dobbins Funeral Home in Marietta. We opened that October with a Christmas open house and today K. Mike Whittle Designs Inc. is a full-service florist offering plants, flowers and food baskets for all life occasions, from birth to death and all the lovelies in between.

What sets our business apart from the average florist is our team. We have compiled some really creative and award-winning designers that work well together and put the “un” in unusual. Our design style could be described as “traditional with a flair.”  We take pride in being different and strive daily to outdo our-selves and to please both the customer and the recipient with both quality and style. My philosophy about customer service is “make it personal.” I want you to feel like you are the only customer that is important to me that day. And customers can expect four things, honesty, getting their money’s worth, satisfaction and unique flair.

Why Cobb County? I have always lived in Cobb County. It is a county that supports its local small business, industry and citi-zens and offers so much that a big city does, yet has a small-town feel.

What do you love about your job? The fact that God has given me the chance to use the talent and creativity that he gave me to make a living is such a blessing. And on top of that, he lets me work with the best team in the industry.

Leisure Time: I enjoy visiting the cabin in the mountains and playing with my grandbabies Berkley and Major. In the spring and summer, I enjoy planting my garden.

My Best Advice: I am really not one to give advice to anyone. The only thing I know is to dream like you know they are going to come true, because they will in his time.

What’s next? I will be opening a DIY Design Center in April off Sandy Plains Road here in Marietta. This will be a studio-style design center where folks can come to design and prepare their own flowers for their events. You will be able to have professional help, if you want it, buy your flowers and have all the tools and supplies you need to create the look you want. It will also offer floral design classes from the very basics to advanced design. The name will be Southern Academy of Floral Education and Design. I am excited because sharing my talents and the talents of my team is a passion.

The Foundation of Education

According to Merriam-Webster Dictionary, “foundation” is a noun that is one of three things: A stone or concrete structure that supports a building from underneath; something such as an idea, principle or fact that provides support for something; or an organization that is created and supported with money that people give in order to do something that helps society.While the last definition properly interprets what school foundations and nonprofits provide for both public and private schools in Cobb County, these organizations can also be viewed as the stones, or rocks, that support a facility, its staff and its children, in addition to an idea that supports what drives these same things in promoting excellence for Cobb’s young people.

In fact, many of Cobb’s private schools and school districts are or have organized nonprofits to help conduct fundraising efforts within their schools or systems, and a majority of that additional funding is raised by employees, parents or guardians, the business community and even several residents who may not have children in the various systems or schools but support the drive for providing quality education.

“The reason it is necessary and important for The Marietta Schools Foundation to exist is to enhance our community’s tradition of spirited involvement in the success of Marietta’s youth. Our children are our future,” says Joseph E. Kinstle, executive director of The Marietta Schools Foundation, which was incorporated in 1983. Kinstle, in addition to two other staff members within the organization and 24 active board members and executive committee oversee 35 separate endowments with a combined portfolio worth more than $3.8 million. Their particular foundation pays out more than $200,000 in donations annually and raises more than $150,000 each year.

Kinstle went on to say that foundations are necessary, specifically in the public school district sector, because systems are always subject to budget cuts. “The Foundation helps to fill those shortcomings. Recently, one of our schools wanted to start a ‘Girls Without Limits’ club to help build and develop leadership skills with young girls within the school. The school needed additional funds beyond what was within their budget, so they came to the Foundation for a small donation to purchase t-shirts and supplies to get this club off the ground,” he adds. “That is just one of the many ways the Foundation is there to help Marietta’s students, faculty and staff enrich their educational experience so that one day each and every student may graduate from Marietta City Schools.”

Other endowments help to support funded project requests that are not normally covered within the school budget, for example, field trips, and there is also an endowment that helps support needy students who cannot afford school supplies and another that provides cash awards to each school’s Teacher of the Year.

Cobb Schools Foundation, the fundraising arm of Cobb County School District, runs similarly. Sheri Brante, executive director of the organization, which was founded in 1999, says their total unrestricted revenues, gains and other increases was $919,000 last year, up from $830,000 the year before. Like Marietta City Schools, money is raised through various events and activities, such as the annual Leaders & Legends Ball and Cobb Classic Golf Tournament. “Funds are used to support teacher grants, scholarships for graduating seniors, After School Program scholarships for kids in need, SAT prep classes for high school juniors, employee and volunteer recognition events and so much more!” Brante says. “We also manage 45 school funds under our umbrella, assisting our local schools and helping them meet local needs. These schools determine how to use the funds that they raise for their schools. Some schools use the funds for technology and academic equipment, supplemental salary funds and other needs that may arise.”

Private Schools

And while private schools do collect tuition from its students and their families, it doesn’t always cover all of the operating costs of a school, so many area schools themselves are nonprofits, which, like Marietta’s and Cobb’s foundations, are philanthropy driven, relying heavily on the financial support of the parents and community to help cover additional costs.

“We do not have a separate organization that raises money for the school, but philanthropy from the Walker community plays a critical role in the school’s success annually and on a long-term basis,” says Shelly Manuel, the school’s director of advancement. Walker itself, which was founded in 1957, is a nonprofit. Gifts from the school’s Annual Fund benefit the annual operating budget of the school through areas such as faculty salaries, professional development and program support. Restricted gifts support the program for which they are designated. A capital campaign would support a specific building, campus enhancement or endowment growth effort, for example.

At Walker, its Board of Trustees approves the annual operating budget and would approve a capital campaign. Last fiscal year, they raised approximately $640,000 through the Annual Fund. As far as future use of funding, Walker recently released a long-range plan in which one of the goals is to enhance the quality of its facilities to positively impact the school’s educational, arts and athletic programs. There are plans for campus expansions and renovation needs. Specifically, Mike Mascheri of Chapman, Coyle, Chapman Architects in Marietta, met with Walker faculty, staff and administrative groups to identify what it will mean to upgrade their facilities, with particular attention being paid to math, science, technology and fine arts facilities for middle and upper school, as well as space needs for athletic programs. Walker acquired 18 acres of contiguous property at 815 Allgood Road for $4.6 million late last year.

Founded in 1998, Mt. Bethel Christian Academy in east Cobb is also organized as a nonprofit. Head of School Jim Callis says their school’s Annual Fund is the primary means of fundraising. “The development office of the school conducts this drive in October of each year,” he says. “One hundred percent parent participation is the primary goal, with a particular dollar amount being a secondary goal.” In addition, Mt. Bethel’s Parents Association raises money year-round, returning those funds to help the school purchase big-ticket items. For example, they bought a school bus in 2013, which like with every dime raised through this organization, benefits the children. Callis, members on the Board of Trustees and Mt. Bethel’s Parent Council helps determine how the funds are allocated. The average amount of contributions from all sources exceeds $500,000 per year.

Mount Paran Christian School in Kennesaw, also itself a nonprofit, has raised funds with the help of volunteers, booster clubs and the Parent Teacher Fellowship since opening in 1976, but about 10 years ago, the school established its development office and hired a director to focus on establishing an Annual Fund for the school to begin building a culture of philanthropy, says Jennifer New, Mount Paran’s director of development. “The Annual Fund is the number one, ongoing fundraising priority for the school,” New adds. “Parent participation in Annual Fund is critical to the school being able to leverage outside resources from foundations and corporations. We ask every family to make a gift to Annual Fund and by our goal-setting and strategies, we focus on participation.”

The nearly half a million raised annually at Mount Paran benefit all students, helping in an array of ways, such as technology upgrades, facility enhancements and professional development for teachers. “In the last couple of years, funds have also gone to support improvements in our campus security,” New says. “Additionally, a portion of Annual Fund goes directly to financial aid for qualifying families who need help with tuition.” In late 2012, the school completed phase one of its Imagine Tomorrow Capital Campaign, raising $16.5 million to purchase the Murray Arts Center on campus. Currently, Mount Paran is in the early stages of phase two to build an athletic stadium and an addition to its high school campus, which is in need of expansion. The original building serves 250 students, but the high school enrollment currently sits at 440 and growing.

To learn more about how you can contribute to area schools and their programs that better serve Cobb’s students, teachers and staff, visit individual school and district websites.

Love on the Marietta Square

The Marietta Square may be the center of community for this Cobb County city, but it’s also become known as one of Cobb’s most romantic areas; there are about 25 weddings a year in Glover Park in the gazebo or on the stage across from the Earl Smith Strand Theatre. Surrounded by the shops and eateries that residents have come to love throughout the area, many couples have found this patch of greenery to be the ideal location for their big day.

“The Strand hosts about the same number of wedding-related events each year, whether it is the wedding itself, reception, rehearsal dinner or combination thereof,” says Andy Gaines, Strand facilities and events director. “The number increases when you add in the anniversary parties celebrated throughout the year.  We’ve even worked with couples who married in the park and celebrated in one of our two different event spaces.” Considered the gem of the Square, more brides and grooms than ever are exchanging vows under the golden proscenium arch in the 531-seat auditorium or in the rooms on the upper floors of the Strand. “We’ve done sunrise weddings outside on the patio, intimate weddings in our second floor lounge and big productions in the auditorium,” adds Gaines.

Todd and Lacey Hull

In July 2008, Todd walked into an art supply store in Roswell where Lacey worked. She rang up his supplies purchase and he left, only to return a few minutes later and ask her out for coffee. “We decided to have our first date on the Square,” Todd recalls. “I asked her out for coffee and that following Friday, we went out on our first date at Shillings, then we went over to Cool Beans afterward. We spent the whole night on the Square just talking until 2 a.m.”

The Hulls feel a close connection to the Square, from the shops and restaurants to the events and community outreach that are central to the area. That first date lead to living in the Brumby Lofts right off the Square for about a year, and now that they are ready to celebrate five years of marriage in May, they still live about a mile from the Square. When it came time to choose a location for their wedding, the Hulls say the Square was a natural choice. Todd, a professional photographer, had gone to the Strand to photograph an event there while previously working for the local paper and learned that they allow rentals. “We just thought what better place to get married than on the Square where we had our first date?” he says.

The Hulls were married in a room on the second floor of the Strand with a lot of windows that sat all of their family members, making for a quaint and intimate ceremony. The reception was held one floor up in a larger room with a patio that lets you look out over the Square and see the lights, making for the perfect venue.

It seems the Square will always hold a special place in their hearts, offering a connection to the community and a great place to gather for something to do any night of the week without needing to drive down to Atlanta or Decatur. From getting ice cream over at Sweet Treats to exploring antique shops and coffee shops, the farmer’s market and the art shows, there is never a shortage of things to do. “It’s just such a community,” Todd says. “That was one of the reasons we loved Marietta and wanted to stay there, because when we thought about getting old we thought this has to be the best place to raise a family.”

Rachel and Matthew Gray

love-on-the-marietta-square-2“My mother fell in love with the Square the first time we took her there,” says Rachel Gray, senior copywriter for Mopdog Creative + Strategy in Kennesaw. “She instantly felt Marietta would be a town where many of my dreams would come true. Also, because of the warm late autumn day, our brightly colored wedding attire and the smell of hog roasting… our wedding day felt very southern.”

Married to Matthew Gray, an outside sales representative at Liberty Mutual Insurance, Rachel met her husband when both of them were living in Albuquerque. “He was an Air Force brat, spending much of his young childhood in Europe,” Rachel recalls. “His family relocated to Ohio when he was in high school, but he is not one to stay in one place for long. We met on MySpace in 2007 and spent months talking (before meeting in person) about being new to Albuquerque and offering ideas on where to go for fun.”

The two moved to Georgia looking for their next adventure when they felt they’d explored most of New Mexico. Renting a small house in Hiram with their two kittens, Gin and Tonic, the two set an expected wedding date on Sept. 29, 2013, and told their families it would just be the two of them. “When we first moved to Georgia, I worked as a hostess at Shillings on the Square, to get to know the area, the people and what media/communications jobs might be in Cobb,” Rachel says. “The Square was really the first place in Georgia that I became familiar with. The first place that made our new community feel like a home.”

Wearing a coral dress with white, yellow and turquoise jewelry, Rachel recalls her wedding morning feeling “relaxed, sunny, young, inspired and intimate” with only one moment of nerves. “We posed for many pictures, per my mother’s only must-do request,” she says. “We took pictures around the fountain and coming up the steps with the clock tower in the background. After the ceremony, the lovely city of Marietta threw us a reception—we happened to wed on the same Sunday as the Whole Hawg Happenin’ BBQ & Music Fest on the Square. We sat with our friends outside for a giant brunch at Shillings while listening to live music from the nearest corner and watching a crowd of wedding guests we had never met.”

The Marietta Square has inspired so many beautiful stories of love and commitment and earned its reputation as a cornerstone of community in Cobb County. The next time you’re grabbing a coffee at Cool Beans or catching a show at the historic Strand, take a look around and think of all the love in the air.

Summer Camp Picks

Editor’s Note:  This article was written in 2015.  If you are looking for this year’s selection, please visit our summer camp directory.


Cobb County has no shortage of great options to keep your children active and engaged this summer. As the South grows warmer, camps are in full swing; whether you’ve got a craft lover or a future athlete to keep busy, schools and organizations throughout the county have camps and programs that are sure to be a perfect fit. With registration dates in mind, look through these options with your child and they’re sure to be entertained all summer long.

Primrose School at Macland Pointe and Sprayberry

Programs: Activities and field trips are themed such as Inventions and Robotics, Quiet on the Set, Beyond the Backyard, Medieval Times, Music Hall of Fame, The Science of Cooking, Scrapyard Crusades and many more.

Hours: 6:30 a.m.−6:30 p.m.

Registration: Enrollments are taken throughout the summer. Parents can pick and choose the weeks they want their children to attend.

Start/End Dates: May 26−July 30, 2015

Highlights: Children attending Primrose summer camps learn a lot but are having fun in a structured, engaging and safe environment. The themes are very imaginative and there is something for each child. There is a structured curriculum that keeps the children engaged during this entire time and field trips are two to three days per week and usually occur in the first part of the day. The Gym Station program that comes once per week in the summer and delivers outside Olympic-type events that are not traditional sports, but physical group challenges. It’s a fun-filled summer that engages, teachers and challenges children in a nurturing, esteem-building, safe environment.

primroseschools.com/schools/macland-pointeprimroseschools.com/schools/sprayberry
(770) 425-0035

whitefield-academy

Whitefield Academy

Programs: Sports, arts and academic camps are available. Camps include drama, princess, basketball, Spanish, writing, grammar, phonics, driver’s education, athletic training, archery, college essay writing, softball, volleyball and much more.

Hours: 8 a.m.−3 p.m. with before-care starting at 7:30 a.m. and after-care until 6 p.m.

Registration: Begins in January and ends May 26

Start/End Dates: May 26−July 31, 2015

Highlights: Whitefield Academy’s summer camps are unique because they are designed to enrich the lives of young people in a fun way with teachers that are passionate about teaching. These specialty camps are taught by high-caliber educators that are so passionate about teaching, they choose to run a Christ-centered summer camp during vacation. On average, Whitefield has about 40 campers each week, which allows for some great relationship building and really fun field trips. Last year, they had more than 400 registrations.

whitefieldacademy.com; (678) 305-3000

The Walker School

the-walker-schoolPrograms: More than 40 camps are offered for ages 3−18, with sport options such as lacrosse, baseball, football and fun with sports; academic enrichment camps to strengthen study skills, math competency, reading fluency and proficiency with robotics and programming; and arts opportunities such as sculpture, portrait drawing, drama and more. Summergraten for ages 3−5 and Summer Explorers for ages 6−10 run all day.

Hours: Half-day camps, 9 a.m.−noon or 1−4 p.m.; day camps, 9 a.m.−4 p.m. with before and after care options

Registration: Opened January 30, 2015 at thewalkerschool.org

Start/End Dates: June 1−July 24, 2015; closed during the week of July 4, 2015

Highlights: Often the most special part of summer camps are the people who put it together; these leaders are not required to offer summer camps, but instead return year after year because they love what they do. The summer faculty is a team of professional teachers, coaches and experts in their fields who demonstrate a genuine interest in cultivating the individual strengths and interests of the campers. Their enthusiasm is contagious and reflected in the comments overhead from campers as they leave at the end of a day of camp.

thewalkerschool.org; (770) 427-2689

North Cobb Christian School

north-cobb-christian-school-campPrograms: Camp Eagle features field trips, crafts and fun while sports, arts and academic camps are also offered

Hours: Full-, half- five-, three- and one-day camps are all available

Registration: Opened in January and is ongoing through the summer

Start/End Dates: May 26−July 31, 2015

Highlights: Camps at North Cobb Christian provide a place for kids to grow in a safe and nurturing environment while making new friends and learning new skills.  As a Christian school, the ultimate goal is for campers to grow in their relationship with Jesus Christ. Many longtime friendships are cemented through the activities and experiences provided in these summer camp opportunities. It’s a wonderful testimony for these camps to see hundreds of kids that return year after year.

ncchristian.org; (770) 975-0252

mount-paran-christian-school

Mount Paran Christian School

Programs: Sports camps include football, tennis, volleyball and more; arts camps include Shakespeare Superheros, mixed media, Once Upon a Ballet and Act, Sing, Dance!; academics offered include LEGO FUNdamentals, Mad Scientist, math, AP Writing and more; as well as “Faith and Fun” camps and even pre-K camps.

Hours: 9 a.m.−noon and 1−4 p.m.

Registration: Ends July 27, 2015

Start/End Dates: June 1−July 31, 2015, depending on the camp

Highlights: Most of the camps at MPC are led by teachers or staff members from the school. This means that many of the students/campers already know the camp leaders and already have a great relationship with them. It also allows any prospective and new students to meet some of the faculty before attending school at Mount Paran in the fall. Camp leaders typically return each summer to run their camps, so many children have participated in these camps for five or more years. MPC also collaborates with a few outside programs to run arts, athletics and academic camps that fulfill the needs of the students, such as ballet, acting, sports and engineering camps.

mtparanschool.com; (770) 578-0182

Making Cobb a 365-Day Destination

365-day-destination

Metro Atlanta is a leader on the national stage in its growth in tourism and Cobb County continues to be a big-time player in helping guide that charge to bring more people to this area. One of the local driving forces behind this effort is Cobb Travel & Tourism, the destination marketing organization for Cobb. “Our goal is to drive people to visit and stay, offering a positive experience that will make them want to come back,” says Holly Bass, Cobb Travel & Tourism’s chief executive officer. “Tourism is the welcome mat and front door to our community. Cobb Travel & Tourism serves as Cobb’s insider’s guide, bringing people together and utilizing many different resources to market Cobb as a 365-day destination.”

In 2014, Cobb’s economic impact was about $2.5 billion as a result of travel and tourism, and some of the game-changers in that effort were Six Flags Over Georgia, Kennesaw Mountain National Battlefield Park, the Cobb Galleria Centre and Cobb Energy Performing Arts Centre, as well as the downtown communities. Cobb Travel & Tourism, which was started in 1991, represents all of the hospitality community within Cobb, working closely with cities, hotels, restaurants and attractions like the ones above, bringing everybody together to represent all the tourism aspects of the community.

A majority, or 92 percent, of the organization’s annual $1.3 million budget is funded by the Hotel Motel Tax, which is collected through the Cobb-Marietta Coliseum and Exhibit Hall Authority. The other 8 percent, Bass says, is raised through partnerships between the organization and community businesses or leaders. Jim Pehrson, Cobb County’s director of finance and economic development, says the Hotel Motel Tax is an excise tax on rooms, lodging and accommodations. Cobb and five of the county’s six cities—Powder Springs does not collect the tax—are authorized to gather the Hotel Motel Tax. The tax percentage in Cobb is 8 percent.

In the last five years, Cobb has accumulated a total of nearly $54 million through collections: 2014, $12.3 million; 2013, $11.2 million; 2012, $10.4 million; 2011, $9.9 million; and 2010, $9.5 million. That funding is required by law to be used to promote tourism, conventions and trade shows. Pehrson says that this is defined as planning, conducting or participating in programs of information and publicity designed to attract or advertise tourism, conventions or trade shows. Additionally, of the taxes collected, Pehrson says that about 62.5 percent goes to the Cobb-Marietta Coliseum and Exhibit Hall Authority, and the remaining 37.5 percent pays the debt service on the Cobb Energy Performing Arts Centre, general parks and tourism.

Among the Best

Bass says Six Flags Over Georgia continues to be Cobb’s No. 1 tourist attraction, followed closely by White Water, the Cobb Galleria Centre the Cobb Performing Arts Centre, the Earl Smith Strand Theatre on the Marietta Square and thriving downtown areas like in Acworth and Smyrna. “Cobb County is incredibly fortunate to have many different assets,” Bass says. “All of that goes toward the 31,000 jobs created as a result of tourism.” And while a tourist is technically defined by someone who travels more than 50 miles to a destination, Bass encourages locals to be tourists in their own backyards, and when family or friends come into town, don’t be afraid to take them to visit Cobb’s unique locations.

As far as the future of tourism in Cobb, Bass adds that it should continue to grow with the development of LakePoint Sports complex just outside Cobb’s northern boundary, the introduction of college football at Kennesaw State University and opening day for the new Atlanta Braves development in 2017, which Cobb Travel & Tourism is working closely with. “SunTrust Park is such a huge win for Cobb County… We anticipate the hospitality community will experience a big boost in their business,” Bass says. “It’s a great game-changer for us—it’s a perfect fit with our mission and how we market Cobb and what they are doing.”

Creating Quality Stays

As far as what this tax means to the hotel motel business, Joel Darr, general manager at Atlanta Marriott Northwest at Galleria off Interstate North Parkway in the Cumberland area, says it’s helpful and driving business to their market. “Our travelers are excited about the new developments in our backyard. We have national and regional groups that are now considering us for future sites of their conferences solely because of the Braves development and their accessibility to it while hosting our event at our property,” he adds. “We have also noticed a significant increase in new companies moving to our area and existing companies with plans for expansion, all which will drive additional travelers to our market.”

Atlanta Marriott Northwest, which was recently renovated, features 400 guest rooms, 18,000 square feet of convention and event space, two on-site restaurants and an indoor/outdoor pool. “We host numerous special events and conventions each year, including Lockheed Martin’s P3 Conference and World Series of Rugby Women 7’s,” says Darr, who has worked with Marriott since 1986.

When asked if the tax has impacted whether patrons stay there, Darr says no because these types of taxes and fees are very common in most markets. He adds that it’s still a little too early to see how the tax has impacted Atlanta Marriott Northwest, but that his staff is working very closely with their transient and group guests to ensure they fully understand the tax. “So far, our guests have been very understanding and all are excited about the opportunity to have such and amazing facility so close the Atlanta Marriott North West,” he says.

So, whether you have family or friends in town or are simply looking for something that you can do on the weekend, or even one evening during the week, know that Cobb is a top-notch tourist spot with tons of things to enjoy, in addition to several great hotels and motels to stay in that, in the long run, benefit all the good things in our area.

Fullers Park Renovated, Field Renamed for Braves Player

fullers-parkThe Atlanta Braves, Cobb County officials and baseball fans young and old recently celebrated renovations to Fullers Park on Robinson Road in east Cobb with a special ceremony renaming the field in honor of Braves hall-of-famer Chipper Jones.The park’s baseball field was revitalized through the generosity of the Atlanta Braves Foundation and the rehabilitation will benefit Eastside Baseball League, which had 159 baseball teams and 1,746 participants in 2014. Field improvements include a re-graded infield, added infield mix, laser grading for proper drainage and rebuilt pitching mounds. On-deck circles and new netting at the backstop were also purchased and installed. The property for Fullers Park was purchased in April 1967 and the development of the more than 50-acre park was completed in June 1974.

Cobb EMC’s New App

cobb-emc

Cobb EMC has launched a new app that allows members to pay and manage their electric accounts through an online portal called SmartHub. It allows residential members to pay by Visa, MasterCard or Discover with no credit card convenience fee. It is accessible through iPhone, iPad and Android devices, featuring the ability to pay bills remotely, monitor electricity use, view real-time payment posting and account updates, report outages and more. Members can simply search for SmartHub and download it at no cost.

Red Hare Classic Car Cruise

red-hare-car-show
Red Hare Brewing Company is hosting a classic car cruise-in on Saturday, April 25, 2015 from 2 pm to 4 pm. The event takes place at the Red Hare Brewery and features all types of classic cars.

From the event organizers, “Calling all classics! Come out to the brewery in your vintage whip, American muscle car, hot rod, or speedy little drop-top on Saturday, April 25th from 2pm – 4pm. All classic car owners will receive a $2 discount on our souvenir pint glass tour package. We’re also kid and dog friendly, with some of the meanest root beer around!”

Date:
April 25, 2015

Time:
2 pm to 4 pm

Address:
Red Hare Brewing Company
1998 Delk Industrial Blvd SE
Marietta, Georgia 30067

For more information, please visit the event website, online at https://www.facebook.com/events/1014371671924601/