Cobb Senior Citizen Council honors East Cobb resident

Thanks to Linda Harris of the Senior Citizen Council of Cobb County, which on Wednesday is honoring its citizens of the year at a special luncheon at the Cobb Senior Wellness Center in Marietta. John Huey, who’s heavily involved at the East Cobb Senior Center, is among the honorees, and here’s what she’s sharing about what he does not just at the center, but in the community:John Huey, Cobb Senior Citizen Council

John M. Huey has been an active member of the East Cobb Senior Center since 2008. Almost a daily visitor of the center, John M. Huey volunteers in any way possible to help keep the center running smoothly in its efforts to serve senior citizens in its immediate area. He is said to be up for any task, whether it be taking out the trash, answering phones, decorating for holidays, or serving as center ambassador/tour guide for newcomers who wish to learn more about the center.

John M. Huey monitors attendance, develops guidelines, and recommends equipment care for the at the East Cobb Senior Center’s billiard room where 16 to 30 people may be playing daily. His volunteer activities include Friends of East Cobb Senior Center, East Cobb Senior Center representative in and treasurer for the Senior Citizen Council of Cobb County in Cobb EMC Owners Association and Friends of Mabry Park. 

John M. Huey, the son of a career army man and housewife, is the oldest of six brothers who all of whom were raised on military bases in Georgia, Germany, Austria and Oklahoma. He settled back in his birthplace of Atlanta, GA in 1968.

A lifelong Sooners fan, John M Huey attended the University of Oklahoma and University of Tulsa where he earned a degree in Preclinical and Industrial Psychology. He held corporate positions at Rich’s, Federated Department Stores and Macy’s for many years before retiring. 

John M. Huey, at the age of 78, demonstrates his belief in staying physically and mentally active by walking, weight lifting, practicing tai chi, yoga, participating in senior games, gardening and playing billiards. He and his wife Dianne, with whom he recently celebrated their 46th anniversary after first meeting at Rich’s, walk 2 miles daily. John M. Huey has run the Peachtree Road Race 27 times. After 10 years at the center, he is still an eager volunteer. 

 

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East Cobb Senior Center to conduct Smoveys fitness class series

East Cobb Senior Center

Starting in February and lasting until April, the East Cobb Senior Center (3332 Sandy Plains Road) will be holding a fitness class involving Smoveys.

They’re molded hollow rings with stainless steel balls that create oscillating vibrations to stimulate body and mind.

Benefits include balance, stability, power, walking, mobility, endurance, coordination, strength and speed. Participants also can take part if they need to be seated.

The classes will be held every Monday starting Feb. 11 and ending April 8 from 9:15-10:15 a.m. There will be no class on Feb. 18 and April 1.

Participants must have a Cobb Senior Services membership to sign up. The class fee is $21 for Cobb residents and $26 for non-residents.

Visit the Cobb Senior Services page for information and to sign up.

 

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Foxtrotters Ballroom Dance Club gets back on the floor at reunion

Foxtrotters Ballroom Dance Club

Thanks to Carolyn Davenport for submitting the following information and photos from the Foxtrotters Ballroom Dance Club reunion Friday at the East Cobb Senior Center.

She said more than 100 people turned out in fancy attire in the first event since the group disbanded last summer after 21 years due to the imposition of a membership fee and increases of other fees at county senior centers.

In December, the head of the Cobb Senior Citizens Council asked county commissioners to reconsider the fees, saying the number of those participating in events at senior centers in Cobb fell by more than half—from around 6,500 to 3,000—because of the fees.

Those fees are now proposed to be eliminated in the upcoming Cobb fiscal year 2020 budget. In speaking to the East Cobb Business Association this week, Cobb Commission Chairman Mike Boyce defended the senior fees, citing a $30 million budget deficit at the time.
Foxtrotters Ballroom Dance Club

Davenport said the Foxtrotters group wants to have more dances at the East Cobb Senior Center:

“It will, however, take the support and attendance of our dancers and others, who have not yet had the pleasure of experiencing a Foxtrotters’ evening, to bring back our glory days of ballroom dancing.  

“Events like our dances are so very important to seniors in many ways.  Ballroom dancing’s health benefits include improved muscle and bone strength, and better posture, balance and motor skills, which can help prevent falls. Researchers speculate that the increased mental activity of ballroom dancing, such as memorizing steps and working with a partner, may help prevent symptoms experienced from dementia, Parkinson’s disease and even chronic heart failure. The social activity is also an important factor in good mental health and positive attitudes of seniors.”

Davenport said anyone who is 55 or older, or knows someone who is, and may be interested in dancing, is invited to get on the Foxtrotters e-mail distribution list. The address is: foxtrottersdanceclub@outlook.com.

The group also has a website and Facebook page that are regularly updated.

Foxtrotters Ballroom Dance Club

 

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Foxtrotters Ballroom Dance Club to hold reunion Friday at East Cobb Senior Center

Foxtrotters Ballroom Dance Club

Last summer we noted the dissolution of the Foxtrotters Ballroom Dance Club, which had been holding events at the East Cobb Senior Center since 1997.

They’re having a “reunion” dance there on Friday, and it’s open to anyone 55 and older, whether they’ve been a member of the club or not.

The attire is formal/dressy, and a live band will be playing from 6:30-9:30 p.m.

The cost is $10, and participants are asked to bring a sweat or savory treat for the buffet table.

East Cobb Senior Center is located at 3332 Sandy Plains Road. Here’s what else is going on there the rest of January, and for information, call 770-509-4900:

Cooking Class with Pampered Chef
CSS membership required
Wednesday, January 16
11:30 a.m.
Registration required
$8 supply fee payable to the instructor

History Corner: “Forgotten Ellis Island” 
CSS membership required
Tuesday, January 22
1-2p.m.
This is the first film about the once abandoned immigrant hospital on Ellis Island. In the era before antibiotics, tens of thousands of immigrant patients were separated from family, detained in the hospital, and healed from illness before becoming citizens.

Dine-a-Round
No CSS membership required
Wednesday, January 23
11:30 a.m. – 1 p.m.: Stockyard Burgers & Bones 26 Mill St, Marietta
Separate checks for lunch; Registration required. Everyone meets at the restaurant.

Couponing Seminar 
CSS membership required
Wednesday, January 30
1-2 p.m.
Free/Registration required
Couponing is great way to save money and even get a little cash back. It is a popular hobby and even a TV show. Join us and learn how to not only clip paper coupons but move into the digital age with your mobile device. You can now use coupons right from your phone.

AARP Smart Driver
No CSS membership requiredJanuary 24
9 a.m.-4 p.m.
$15 AARP members / $20 Non-members
Check with your insurance agent about a possible discount. Bring a lunch.

 

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Senior Citizen Council of Cobb wants reconsideration of senior fees

After Cobb seniors were asked to pay a membership fee and pay higher fees for services at county senior centers this year, a senior citizens group is asking that they be eliminated or at least reconsidered.

At a recent Cobb Board of Commissioners meeting, June Van Brackle, president of the Senior Citizen Council of Cobb County, cited a figure that fewer than 3,000 seniors are using the centers this year, compared to around 6,500 before the fees were imposed.

Earlier, commissioners set an annual membership fee of $60 a person to take part in activities at the senior centers.

In January, Cobb Commission Chairman Mike Boyce held a town hall meeting at the East Cobb Senior Center to get input on the proposed fees (see photo above) as part of the county’s budget process.

While some were upset by the membership fees and higher cost for activities fees and room rentals, he said “we’re all in this together.”

One group that regularly met at the East Cobb Senior Center has stopped having regular events there. The Foxtrotters Ballroom Dance Club, held a farewell dance in June after 21 years. They’re having a reunion dance there on Jan. 18.

Here’s more from Van Brackle’s remarks:

The Senior Citizens Council of Cobb is urging the Board of Commissioners to eliminate these mandatory fees. Cobb County is renowned for the services it offers to its residents. The reduction in participation at the five centers can only be a major detriment to the overall quality of life for Cobb seniors.

The Senior Citizen Council of Cobb County is an all-volunteer organization that has been in existence for 45 years and advocates for better public policies for Cobb seniors. The Council has always been against additional burden on our oldest citizens and if you are interested, we ask that you contact your commissioner and express your feelings regarding these fees.

Commissioners will be holding their semiannual retreat Monday at the Cobb Civic Center, and Boyce told Van Brackle to attend.

 

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Cobb advance voting locations include two additions in East Cobb

East Cobb Senior Center

Advance voting starts on Monday in Cobb County, with the main Cobb Elections office (736 Whitlock Ave.) and Jim Miller Park Event Center (2245 Callaway Road) open from 8 a.m. to 5 p.m., Monday-Friday, through Nov. 2.

You can also vote there on Saturday, Oct. 20, and Saturday, Oct. 27, from 8 a.m. to 4 p.m.

The week before the Nov. 6 general election, early voting expands to several venues in the county, including three in East Cobb.

In addition to the previously announced location at the East Cobb Government Service Center (4400 Lower Roswell Road), advance voting also will take place at Noonday Baptist Church (4120 Canton Road) and the East Cobb Senior Center (3332 Sandy Plains Road, pictured above).

The dates are Oct. 29-Nov. 2, from 8 a.m. to 7 p.m. There’s no advance voting on Saturday, Nov. 3, or Monday, Nov. 6.

Cobb Elections is looking for poll workers for the Nov. 6 general election. Visit the website for more information.

 

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East Cobb Senior Center to hold 23rd anniversary celebration Aug. 10

East Cobb Senior Center

Calling all seniors (ages 55 and up): The East Cobb Senior Center (3332 Sandy Plains Road) is marking its 23rd anniversary next month, and  the celebration will be themed along the “23 Arabian Nights.”

The event is Aug. 10 from 11 a.m. to 2 p.m., but you’ve got only a little more than a week to register. The deadline is July 16, and the cost is $15 for Cobb residents and $18 for non-residents.

Participants are encouraged to dress in their best genie outfits if they so desire.

For more information, call 770-509-4900.

Here’s our coverage from last year’s anniversary bash, which had a “Gone With the Wind” theme.

Here are some events at the East Cobb Senior Center for the rest of July:

  • July 17, Window Bird Watching; 10-11:30 a.m., free, registration required;
  • July 18, Spices and Their Benefits, 10-11:30 a.m., free, registration required;
  • July 20, Nutrition and Aging Myths, 10-11 a.m., free, registration required;
  • July 26, AARP Smart Driver class, 9 a.m.-4 p.m., $15-$20.
  • July 30, Burgers and Shakes, 11:30 a.m.-1:30 p.m., $8 supply fees; a burger bar and homemade milkshakes, taught by Cherie Beasley of Pampered Chef.

Visit the Cobb government CivicRec portal to sign up and learn about other classes, programs and activities.

 

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Revised Cobb budget proposal seeks tax hike, keeps libraries and parks open

revised Cobb budget
Cobb Commission Chairman Mike Boyce holds his first budget town hall meeting Monday at the East Cobb Senior Center. (East Cobb News file photo)

A revised Cobb budget for fiscal year 2019 would keep open libraries and parks that had been put on draft lifts as options for closures because of the county’s projected $30 million deficit.

The revised budget, which Boyce explained in his weekly video (see bottom of this post), comes to $453 million for the general fund. The current budget for the general fund is $405 million.

In addition, the proposed budget would would add police officer positions and purchase body cameras for law enforcement and have Sunday opening hours at regional libraries (including the Mountain View branch in East Cobb).

It also would keep open the UGA Cobb Extension Service and the county animal services department. Those agencies also have been mentioned for possible elimination.

The millage rate increase he is seeking is 1.7 mills, above the 1.1-mill hike he had initially sought. While the 1.1 mills could cover the $30 million gap, Boyce said additional funds are necessary to restore county services to what they were before the recession.

He said based on feedback from Cobb citizens, especially in regards to libraries and parks facilities, the message is clear.

“We’re not closing anything,” Boyce said. “From what I’ve heard and seen, people like these amenities and want us to keep them. But I have to find a way to pay for them.”

Boyce, who begins a series of budget town hall meetings on Monday at the East Cobb Senior Center, also laid out how much a 1.7-mill increase would cost property owners (see chart below), with annual jumps ranging from $170 to $1,700, based the the taxable value of their homes.

Revised Cobb budget, millage chart

After a testy Cobb budget retreat this week, Boyce got no “clear direction” from other commissioners about what proposal to take to the public. East Cobb commissioner Bob Ott has maintained that he wants to see more spending cuts before he would support any kind of increase.

Northeast Cobb commissioner JoAnn Birrell has said “everything is on the table” but that she didn’t favor shutting down parks facilities.

East Cobb facilities that have appeared on draft lists prepared by department heads and made public include the East Cobb Library, Fullers Park and Fullers Recreation Center, the Mountain View Aquatic Center, Mountain View Community Center and The Art Place.

Other budget details include restoring eliminated Cobb DOT maintenance positions and increasing right-of-way mowing contracts. Proposed cuts include $2 million in local grant matches and information services contracts.

Boyce said he’s gotten many e-mails from citizens complaining about unmowed grass along county roads and potholes.

On Wednesday, Cobb government asked in a social media posting for the public’s patience in handling a long backlog of transportation maintenance calls. It said Cobb DOT received 300 requests for service in a seven-day period and that the backlog includes 1,800 work orders.

“At current staffing levels, DOT is completing about 20 work orders per day,” according to the message.

“Do we want to have a county with a high quality of life serviced by the best staff in Georgia?” Boyce said in his video. “Or do we want to live in a mediocre county staffed and funded by a sub-par budget?”

He also said that “these town halls make a difference.”

Monday’s town hall meeting at the East Cobb Senior Center (3332 Sandy Plains Road) starts at 7 p.m. The town halls continue through July 9 at the Sewell Mill Library, followed by three public budget hearings that are required by law.

Budget adoption is scheduled for July 25.

Related stories

 

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Foxtrotters Ballroom Dance Club is ending after 21 years at East Cobb Senior Center

Foxtrotters Ballroom Dance Club

The Foxtrotters Ballroom Dance Club is disbanding at the end of this month, after 21 years of events at the East Cobb Senior Center. A farewell dance will take place there on June 22.

A steep increase in fees for renting out the event for their dances is the reason for the decision to shut down the group, Foxtrotters president Barbara Digulla told East Cobb News.

Like other groups and individuals who have been using the East Cobb Senior Center, the Foxtrotters have been affected by proposed activity fee increases for senior centers across the county to address Cobb’s current $30 million budget deficit.

At a January town hall meeting in January at the East Cobb Senior Center, Boyce told seniors upset about the proposals that “we’re all in this together” in terms of resolving the county’s fiscal crisis.

While some seniors didn’t object to paying a $60 annual membership fee, groups that meet at senior centers were alarmed by the high increases that commissioners are being asked to approve.

The Foxtrotters have paid $120 a month to Cobb Senior Services for the use of the facility for their monthly dances.

That cost could jump to $540 an event, if the proposed fee increases are approved when the commissioners finalize the budget in July. The hours for their dances also were pushed up from 7-10 p.m. to 6-9 p.m., with the county citing security reasons.

The Foxtrotters said the changing hours negatively affected turnout, and they hire their own security guard for their dances. Digulla said she was able to negotiate a 7-10 p.m. window for their final dance on June 22.

She said around a third of those coming for the dances are from well beyond the Cobb area, including DeKalb and Gwinnett counties and elsewhere.

“We’ve accepted it,” Digulla said about the end of the group. She said she and other dance club members “tried every possibility there is in this area” to find another place for their events, including churches and community centers.

She said that typically 45-55 people attend a dance, but attendance has been down 20 to 30 percent since the new fees kicked in.

Digulla said the Foxtrotters are required to pay for a security guard that cost $80 an event. Combined with that and the rental fee, along with around $500 an event for bands, each dance cost in the range of $650 to $750 a month.

To have to pay nearly double that, between $1,100 to $1,200 a month, and on short notice, “is ridiculous,” Digulla said.

The Foxtrotters aren’t the first senior dance group to shut down in the wake of the new Cobb senior activity fees.

The Stardust Dance Ballroom Dance Group that held events at the West Cobb Senior Center also is closing down, due to the proposed fee increases, and is having three final dances this year at a senior center in Paulding County.

The Cobb Board of Commissioners is scheduled to adopt the fiscal year 2019 budget in July. The senior fee increases were initially delayed as Boyce held senior town hall meetings, but they went into effect this spring.

Launched in 1997 by founding members Naomi Davis and Jan Henkleman, the Foxtrotters are geared toward seniors, with attendance open to those 55 and older.

In 2014, the Foxtrotters were featured on Atlanta public radio station WABE during National Ballroom Dance Week.

They used to have another senior dance group, the Flamingos, who met at the Windy Hill Senior Center, but that group disbanded when the center closed in 2011.

The Foxtrotters farewell event begins June 22, 21 years and two days after their first event at the East Cobb Senior Center. The cost is $15 a person, with music provided by The Continentals Band and the theme “I’ve Got the Sun in the Morning.”

Digulla said around 70 people have signed up to attend, enough to provide a free buffet meal as the Foxtrotters have their last dance.

As a Foxtrotters Facebook page message indicated:

“Let’s say goodbye in style and pay tribute to the best social event East Cobb has ever known!”

 

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Some Cobb senior services fees may be taken up by citizens committee

Seniors packed the East Cobb Senior Center earlier this month for a town hall meeting about fee increases that drew sharp opposition. (East Cobb News file photo).

UPDATED, Jan. 24, 12:23 p.m.:

On Tuesday, the Cobb Board of Commissioners approved a $60 annual membership fee, with a $5 monthly option, to go into effect Feb. 1. Scheduled increases in room rates and classes will be put on hold as a citizens committee will take up the issue.

That committee, which is to be selected to a special assistant to commission chairman Mike Boyce, will be examining fee structures and is expected to make recommendations by June.

ORIGINAL REPORT, 6:22 p.m., Jan. 22:

Increases for some Cobb senior services fees, particularly for room rentals and classes, may be put on hold after seniors protested during recent town hall meetings earlier this month, including one at the East Cobb Senior Center (previous East Cobb News post here).

The new fees were set to go into effect on Feb. 1, but Cobb commission chairman Mike Boyce wants to create a citizens committee to come up with alternatives to the staff proposals that upset seniors during those town hall meetings.

Cobb commissioners will be considering that measure at Tuesday’s regular meeting that starts at 7 p.m. on the 2nd floor of the Cobb government building, 100 Cherokee St., in downtown Marietta.

Boyce is recommending that an annual membership fee of $60 for Cobb residents go into effect on Feb. 1, as commissioners had approved in October, but by charging $5 a month instead of the yearly amount in advance.

The commissioners discussed feedback from the town hall meetings at a work session on Monday.

As he did at the East Cobb meeting, Boyce apologized for how the county handled the proposed fee increases, which angered seniors as much as the steep costs for some services.

“We could have done this better,” Boyce said.

At the East Cobb town hall, major objections were made to room rental rates that in some cases were increases of more than 200 or even 300 percent. One group that meets there frequently, the Golden K Kiwanis, said the new rates would cost nearly as much money as the organization raises for its charitable programs.

Some class fees would more than double or even triple, especially for painting classes, which in some cases would have been raised from $48 to $160.

“I get their point,” Boyce said of the protests to those particular fees. “They would like to be part of the discussion. What we don’t want to do is freeze out the seniors.”

If the commissioners approve on Tuesday, existing room rates and class fees will continue until the committee makes its recommendations.

Another suggestion Boyce mentioned to his colleagues is using senior centers as community centers, and permitting programs for those under 55.

Northeast Cobb commissioner JoAnn Birrell also suggested a special fee structure for groups that use the senior centers after hours, since the county incurs additional costs for having staff working during evenings.

Boyce said he would be asking Michael Murphy, his staff assistant for special projects, to form the committee.

 

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Reminder: East Cobb Senior Center town hall meeting on senior fees is Friday

East Cobb Senior Center

A couple weeks ago we posted the notice that the East Cobb Senior Center is the first venue for several town hall meetings this month on proposed fee increases for senior services in Cobb County.

That first town hall is coming up Friday, from 10 a.m. to 11:30 a.m., and will be hosted by Cobb Commission Chairman Mike Boyce.

The East Cobb Senior Center is located at 3332 Sandy Plains Road, and the town hall meeting is free and open to the public.

Cobb commissioners have approved imposing an annual membership fee for seniors for the first time, at a charge of $60. The non-resident fee is $90, but at a commission meeting in November, a number of seniors, including some who regularly use the East Cobb Senior Center, strongly objected.

Boyce said he wants to collect further feedback before the fee changes, which also would cover spring classes and offerings, go into effect Feb. 1.

 

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Cobb senior services fees subject of East Cobb Senior Center town hall meeting

East Cobb Senior Center

The East Cobb Senior Center will be the venue for the first of several town hall meetings in January for public feedback on newly enacted Cobb senior services fees.

That first town hall hosted by Cobb Commission Chairman Mike Boyce is scheduled for Friday, Jan. 12, from 10 a.m. to 11:30 a.m. The East Cobb Senior Center is located at 3332 Sandy Plains Road (phone: 770-509-4900).

At a November Cobb Board of Commissioners meeting, some East Cobb seniors sounded off against the rising fees, including the imposition of a membership fee for the first time (previous East Cobb News post here).

Senior fees had been recommended several years ago by a Cobb government citizens oversight committee, and were approved by commissioners who are facing a projected $30 million budget deficit for fiscal year 2019.

The membership fee for seniors will be $60 annually for Cobb residents and $90 for non-residents. It goes into effect on Feb. 1 and does not affect winter class registration that starts Jan. 22. The membership fee will be required to sign up for classes in the spring.

The other town hall meetings will take place Jan. 17 at the North Cobb Senior Center in Acworth and at the West Cobb Senior Center in Powder Springs, Jan. 18 at the Freeman Poole Senior Center in Smyrna and on Jan. 19 at the Marietta Senior Center.

For more information visit the Cobb Senior Services Department website.

 

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More details about Cobb Senior Services membership program

Cobb Senior Services membership program
The East Cobb Senior Center celebrated its 22nd anniversary in August. (East Cobb News file photo)

The Cobb Board of Commissioners voted on Nov. 15 to create a membership fee structure for use of Cobb Senior Services, including centers such as the East Cobb Senior Center (previous East Cobb News post here).

The charges go into effect on Feb. 1, 2018, and will be implemented for spring 2018 class registration (but not winter, which is still going on. Here’s also a schedule of December and holiday activities at the East Cobb Senior Center, 3332 Sandy Plains Road).

Here’s what the county sent out earlier today, with more details and contact information about the new membership program:

Membership Fees

  • Cobb residents: $60/year
  • Non-residents: $90/year

You may create your yearly membership online at CobbSeniors.org or by visiting any senior center. Cash, check and credit cards (MasterCard/Visa/American Express) are acceptable forms of payment.

  • Included in the yearly membership are free, evidence-based health programs (Cooking Matters, Matter of Balance, etc.), access to workout facilities and free coffee.
  • If you can’t afford the membership fee, call 770-528-5355 to discuss possible options. You must be within the federal poverty guidelines for consideration.

Class Registration

Registration for winter 2018 classes will begin Monday, Jan. 22, for everyone. Both in-person registration and online registration will start at 9 a.m. Although class fees will remain the same for winter 2018 classes, the new fee structure will be in place for spring registration beginning in April. You must have a valid 2018 Senior Services membership BEFORE you register for any spring 2018 and beyond classes.

The fee schedule is available at each senior center. To view a question-and-answer fact sheet on the new membership program, click here.

Please call 770-528-5355 with questions not addressed above.

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East Cobb Senior Center December events gearing up for the holidays

East Cobb Senior Center

Not everything on the East Cobb Senior Center December events listings are holiday-oriented, but there are some festive celebrations on tap, including a tree decoration event and dinner at a local restaurant. The senior center is located at 3332 Sandy Plains Road, and the phone number for more information is 770-509-4900. Here’s a full list of what’s in store in December:

Phones for the Hard of Hearing 
Friday, Dec. 1
10 a.m.-11 a.m.
Free; Registration required
Come to our seminar to learn more about caption phones. These phones will help you with any form of hearing loss and also bridge the gap of missed communication in a most effective way. Presented by Monique Waldron with Clear Captions.

Wiggin’ Out 101
Tuesday, Dec. 5
10:30 a.m.-11:30 a.m.
Free; Registration required
Come to our seminar to learn basic head prep for wearing wigs, choosing the right wig type, washing and roller setting wigs, wig styling, and wig maintenance. Presented by Erica Gamble with The Wig Boutique.

Healthy Living for Your Brain
Wednesday, Dec. 6
10 a.m.-11:30 a.m.
Free; Registration required
As we know, the health of the brain and body are connected. Join Kara Johnson with the Alzheimer’s Association to learn about research in the areas of diet, nutrition, exercise, cognitive activity, social engagement, and use hands-on tools to help you incorporate these recommendations into a plan for healthy aging.

Eggnog and Mittens 
Friday, Dec. 15
3 p.m.-4:50 p.m.
Admission: mittens, a scarf or a hat
Come celebrate the winter holidays and this magical time of year. Enjoy Donna’s famous eggnog, cookies, and Good Time Band. We will set a tree up where you hang new mittens, scarves, and hats, which will be given to MUST Ministries. Sponsored by The Solana East Cobb.

Christmas Dinner-a-Round 
Wednesday, Dec. 13
Muss and Turner’s East Cobb
1205 Johnson Ferry Rd #101
5:30 p.m.-7 p.m.
Separate checks for dinner; Registration required. Everyone meets at the restaurant.

AARP Smart Driver
December 28
9 a.m.- 4 p.m.
$15 AARP members / $20 Non-members (cash or check only)
Check with your insurance agent about a possible discount. Bring a lunch.

East Cobb seniors object, but higher fees approved by Cobb commissioners

East Cobb Senior Center

Before the Cobb Board of Commissioners voted Tuesday to raise user fees for a variety of county services, some East Cobb seniors voiced their opposition to the proposals.

It didn’t prevent the commissioners from voting 5-0 to levy increases, including a first-time membership fee for seniors, as they seek to find ways to close an expected $30 million budget hole for fiscal year 2019.

The senior membership fee was reduced from a proposed $100 a year per person to $60 at the request of Northeast Cobb commissioner JoAnn Birrell, who said she was concerned about seniors on a fixed income.

Of the increases overall, she said “it’s something we’ve talked about for years, and it’s much needed.”

Hope Notice, a regular at the East Cobb Senior Center, said she thought that “the raising of fees seemed to be an afterthought.” She said the membership fees are “utterly ridiculous,” and noted that seniors in Woodstock pay only $10 and in Roswell, the annual fee is $25 and includes the use of a swimming pool.

“I realize you need to raise fees, but please find other ways to raise money,” she said. “These increases are more than the norm.”

The membership fees would apply to use of any senior center in Cobb County. Commission chairman Mike Boyce said that while the fee increases approved Tuesday apply to many other services, the only e-mails he has received have come from seniors.

Shirley Scaff, another regular at the East Cobb Senior Center, told commissioners before the vote that she meets there often as part of the Knit Wits knitting group, and also belongs to a crocheting circle. She said the socializing and other benefits of staying active through the center’s many programs are vital for her and others.

“We have members from [age] 60 to 95,” she said. “We enjoy the companionship and the fellowship” and being active “keeps the mind going.” A membership fee, she said, would be “a hardship.”

East Cobb commissioner Bob Ott supported the $100 fee structure. He noted that there is a sliding scale available and that the Cobb Citizens Oversight Committee recommended increases several years ago.

The increased senior fees will go into effect on Feb. 1, 2018, along with increases the commissioners also approved Tuesday for aquatics, athletics, gymnastics and tennis fees; arts fees; picnic pavilion rentals; rentals for the Cobb Civic Center and performing arts venues; and for recreation and community centers as well as library proctoring services and meeting room rentals.

Fees to file for zoning certificates also will go up in 2018, from $40 to $100, and from $200 to $300 for film permits.

The cost for business licenses also is increasing, and will take effect on Oct. 1, 2018. The current range is $102 a year to nearly $15,000 a year (with several tiers based on gross revenues). The new fees will range from $112 to $16,400 annually.

 

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Registration underway for East Cobb Veterans Day Celebration event

An East Cobb Veterans Day celebration scheduled for Nov. 10 is free to veterans and family members of those who have served.

UPDATE: We’ve been notified that the reservation limit has been reached. In other words, it’s “sold” out; however you can put your name on a waiting list.

However, they are required to register by the end of next week, Nov. 3, to reserve their place, and they must do so in person. There’s also a ticket limit (see details below).East Cobb Veterans Day celebration

The East Cobb Senior Center and the East Cobb McCleskey Family YMCA and Northeast Cobb YMCA are teaming up to sponsor the event, which takes place from 5-8 p.m. Nov. 10 at the East Cobb Senior Center, 3332 Sandy Plains Road.

The event includes music and dinner, and the special guest is Cobb commission chairman Mike Boyce, a retired U.S. Marine Corps officer.

More from Cobb District 3 commissioner JoAnn Birrell:

“The keynote speaker will be Cobb County Chairman Col. Mike Boyce (Ret.). . . Doors will open at 4:45 p.m. for seating and fellowship. Program will begin promptly at 5 p.m.

Anyone who desires to attend must register no later than Friday, Nov. 3. Registration is open to those 18 years of age and older and you must visit the East Cobb Senior Center’s front desk to request a ticket. Limit two tickets per household.  

“For more info, contact the East Cobb Senior Center at 770-509-4900 or McCleskey and Northeast Cobb YMCAs at 770-977-5991.”

Cobb sheriff to hold gun safety class at East Cobb Senior Center

Submitted by Cobb County Government:Cobb sheriff

Cobb County Sheriff Neil Warren is offering firearms safety and education classes. The program will include discussions on gun safety and storage, gun types, choosing the right gun for you, gun ownership and transfer laws, use of force, firearm alternatives, Georgia weapons license, active shooter situations and answering questions from class participants. Each participant will also receive one free safety gun lock. The programs is free to attend and there is no need to register. The next class will be:

  • 6 p.m.Sept. 14
    East Cobb Senior Center, 3332 Sandy Plains Road, Marietta

For more information, email Glenn.Daniel@cobbcounty.org.

EAST COBB IN PICTURES: Photos from the first 6 weeks of East Cobb News

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East Cobb News has been online for about six weeks, and already we’ve covered quite a few events in the community that you may not have seen—averaging about two a week, sometimes more.

Since we’re new, and picking up new readers all the time, we thought we’d serve up a “best of” photo gallery from these events. Because we launched in the middle of the summer, we have a lot of outdoors and sports-related pictures, but they’re all popular community events we enjoyed attending. As we continue to grow, we plan to cover all kinds of events that capture the essence of the East Cobb community, and the spirit of the people who live here.

That’s why we’re asking for your help. If you know of a community event you’d like for East Cobb News to cover in the future, or have photos of an event that’s taken place that you’d like to share, please contact: editor@eastcobbnews.com.

East Cobb News is practicing the community-collaborative approach to local news, and reader/organization contributions are always welcome! When you submit your news and photos, you’re helping us serve our readers better. East Cobb is a big place with so much going on, and we want to earn your trust and become this community’s leading source of real-time news, events and information.

To see more photos and read stories about these events, please click the links below.

PHOTOS: East Cobb Senior Center celebrates 22nd anniversary

East Cobb Senior Center

The 22nd anniversary of the East Cobb Senior Center was celebrated by a couple hundred patrons on Friday with a “Gone With the Wind Theme,” but it didn’t end there.

Lunch was dubbed “Barbecue at 12 Oaks” after the name of theO’Hara plantation at Tara in the book and film. Attendees were summoned to the buffet when their table names were called out, in honor of “GWTW” characters Ashley Wilkes, Mellie Hamilton and Scarlett O’Hara.

East Cobb Senior Center

Among the honored guests were Cobb Commission Chairman Mike Boyce and Commissioner JoAnn Birrell. Cobb Senior Services Staff, dressing every bit the part, were the hostesses for the festivities.

East Cobb Senior Center

Square dance and line dance music suddenly turned modern, with “The Twist,” “Woolly Bully,” and “Blue Suede Shoes” providing an energetic mid-day exercise that continued into early afternoon.

East Cobb Senior Center

East Cobb Senior Center

A little slow dancing was mixed in with a dash of easy-going hip-hop . . .

East Cobb Senior Center

East Cobb Senior Center

. . . followed by a return to some oldies that kept quite a few couples, and a number of good friends, on the dance floor during a festive afternoon. (East Cobb News photos by Wendy Parker)

East Cobb Senior Center