02-07-2014 Sandy Springs Reporter

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FEB. 7 — FEB. 20, 2014 • VOL. 8 — NO. 3

Check this out PHIL MOSIER

Riverwood International Charter School lacrosse player William Flinn, right, heads toward the goal while Jeffrey Houks, left, defends his turf, during the Raiders boys’ varsity practice on Feb. 1. The team’s first scrimmage is against Lambert High School in Suwanee on Feb. 15. Head Coach Lou Corsetti says the team’s philosophy is “hard work and education make your legacy.” More photos on page 26.

Our new columnist talks about family life COMMENTARY 9

Where you live Check out recent home sales in this new section HOME & REAL ESTATE 10-13

Going country

Oglethorpe exhibits French landscapes OUT & ABOUT 14

Keeping pace These churches strive to remain ‘relevant’ FAITH 22-23

Pony up Strip club offers to settle lawsuit with Brookhaven COMMUNITY 30

Society asks they not be cut off from city grants

Praising storm response, cities seek improvement

BY JOE EARLE

BY JOE EARLE

joeearle@reporternewspapers.net

joeearle@reporternewspapers.net

After hearing representatives from one of Sandy Springs’s bestknown nonprofits ask not to be cut off from city donations, City Council members are continuing to tweak the city’s policy for such gifts. Members of the Sandy Springs Society, one of the city’s fundraising charities, told council members Feb. 4 they believed proposed changes to the policy would prohibit them from receiving grants. “The society and I have major concerns about the modifica-

Once the ice melted and the traffic gridlock eased, local officials began considering how to improve future reactions After the storm to storms like the one that Personal stories, official froze metro Atlanta in Jancomments and social media uary. recap the big storm, pages 4-7 “We will do a postmortem to assess things we did well and what could have been done better,” Sandy Springs May-

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COMMUNITY ArtSS proposes public mural project

B RIEFS

Arts Sandy Springs is proposing a new public art project to bring murals to blank walls throughout the city. ArtSS president Cheri Morris said the nonprofit group hopes to bring three to 10 murals to prominent locations in Sandy Springs within the next year. “We are way ahead of the other new cities in public art and we want to keep that lead,” she told members of Sandy Springs City Council at their Feb. 4 meeting. The murals would be paid for the Atlanta Hawks basketball team as part of its public outreach programs, Morris said. “The Hawks want to become part of this community through this art outreach,” she said. Peter Sorckoff, vice president for marketing and creative for the Hawks, said after the meeting that the project was part of a Hawks campaign “to bring

things with in-town cool to the suburbs.” Morris said designs for the murals would be chosen by judges selected by ArtSS and then presented to the City Council for review to ensure they were appropriate. Locations for the murals would be worked out with city officials or private landowners, she said. Allowing the murals could require an amendment to the city sign ordinance, city officials said. Mayor Rusty Paul and council members generally backed the idea of the project, but Paul said public discussion of the proposal would be needed before murals are approved. “This is a significant step for the city,” Paul said. “I think it would be very wise on our part to bring in some public input on this...

Sandy Springs Government Calendar The Sandy Springs City Council usually meets the first and the third Tuesday of each month at 6 p.m. at City Hall, which is located at 7840 Roswell Road, Building 500 For the most up to date meeting schedule, visit http://www.sandyspringsga.org/Calendars/City-Calendar

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If you’re talking about putting public art on publicly-owned buildings, we ought to have some public input.” Council members generally agreed ArtSS could proceed in investigating using a wall at Morgan Falls Athletic Complex for the first mural.

City to buy Wieuca Road fire station City officials have agreed to purchase Sandy Springs Fire Station No. 4 from Atlanta. The city will pay $1.24 million for the station, a former Atlanta fire station located inside the city of Atlanta at 4697 Wieuca Road. The price being paid is the appraised value of the property, City Attorney Wendell Willard said.

City plans to install stoplight on Johnson Ferry City officials plan to install a new traffic light at the intersection of Johnson Ferry and Wright roads. Traffic studies show the intersection now has a service level graded as “F,” city officials said during the Sandy Springs City Council meeting Feb. 4.

Installing a traffic light would cost about $90,000 and raise the intersection’s grade to “C” in the morning and “B” in the afternoon, Public Works Director Garrin Coleman told council members. A “mini-roundabout” at the intersection would cost about twice as much and raise the grade only to “E” in the morning and “C” in the afternoon, he said.

AirWatch executive: Company will continue to grow Sandy Springs-based Airwatch’s Chief Operating Officer David Dabbiere told the Sandy Springs Rotary Club that his company plans to grow in the Perimeter. “We will continue to expand and hire in the area,” Dabbiere said. “We are heavily invested in Perimeter office space.” AirWatch made national headlines recently when it was purchased by California-based VM Ware, Inc. for $1.5 billion. At the Rotary Club’s Feb. 3 meeting, Dabbiere said Sandy Springs has been a great home for the company, which provides security for mobile computing devices such as tablets and cellphones. “It’s a great time to be in technology,” Dabbiere said. “I couldn’t imagine a better place to have a technology company.”

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COMMUNITY

Planned county tax increase called ‘illegal’ BY MELISSA WEINMAN

“We’ve trimmed our budget by over $100 million since 2007. We’ve found areas we can be more efficient and we’ve cut, cut, cut. We’ve cut down to the bone and we had no choice in my opinion but to increase the millage rate to generate revenue for the 2014 budget.”

melissaweinman@reporternewspapers.net

The Fulton County Board of Commissioners has proposed an increase in the county’s tax rate, though state officials claim it’s illegal because of a tax freeze put in place last year. According to county officials, the commission proposed increasing the 2014 tax rate by 1.57 mills, which would increase property taxes by $78.50 for a $200,000 house. Fulton County Chairman John Eaves said the increase, the first since 1991, was necessary to sustain funding to Grady Hospital, senior citizen services and other programs that would have had to be cut. “We’ve trimmed our budget by over $100 million since 2007,” Eaves said. “We’ve found areas we can be more efficient and we’ve cut, cut, cut. We’ve cut down to the bone and we had no choice in my opinion but to increase the millage rate to generate revenue for the 2014 budget.” However, in 2013 state lawmakers approved a measure to freeze property taxes in Fulton County through 2015. “The action passed by Fulton County clearly violates the law that we passed and I think it’s an absolute

Read all of our editions online

– FULTON COUNTY CHAIRMAN JOHN EAVES

shame that taxpayer dollars are going to be wasted defending a clearly illegal act,” said Rep. Edward Lindsey, RAtlanta. Lindsey, who represents Buckhead, said the purpose of the freeze was to reduce the size of Fulton County government. “Given the fact we are so heavily municipalized, it’s time for Fulton County to reduce itself in size and allow local governments to step up,” Lindsey said. But Eaves said the county’s attorney believes the commission has the right

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to increase the millage rate. “It was an unprecedented action for the state to impose its will on a local jurisdiction. Frankly, I think it was an infringement on home rule,” Eaves said. “I feel that the law was unreasonable, unjustified and mean-spirited.” The two governments have different opinions on the tax freeze’s legality. “We carefully examined the authority of the state to limit this kind of tax increase and are confident we’re in our authority to do so based on a local constitutional amendment,” Lindsey said.

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AFTER THE STORM

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J.D. MOOR

Slip and slide From left, Malena Shipley, 9, Fernando Reyes, 6, and Jesus Reyes, 4, who live in the Drew Valley Road area in Brookhaven, take off down an icy street on Jan. 29, using the tops of DeKalb County recycling bins as sleds.

Residents share tales of dealing with ‘SnowedOutAtlanta’ Reporter Newspapers asked residents of our communities how they spent the “snow days” that froze the city on Jan. 28 and Jan. 29. Here are edited versions of their first-person accounts. To see the full versions, go to ReporterNewspapers.net. Dunwoody resident Robin Isaf found her usual trip to pick up her kids at school turned into a trial by icy road. “I was one of the many who looked up at the sky at 7:30 Tuesday morning and said, ‘Nah, nothing to worry about.’” ... “I knew that there would be an early dismissal [from school] and I was grateful for the school’s judiciousness. My boys would be home just after lunchtime and I had big plans for the day. I’d pick up my carpool. I’d leave 45 minutes early and be the first one in the carpool line. Then, once we got home — maybe it would take as much as an hour! — I’d make hot chocolate and a pot of soup, and we’d revive ourselves with something warm, and then I’d settle in in front of my laptop again while they went out and frolicked in the snow. “So much for the best laid plans. “I hit the road to get to their school about the same time that a few innocent-looking flurries began, and at precisely the same time that the entire metro Atlanta population of 6 million all left their respective homes and offices. It took me three times longer than usual to get to school. “It took almost an hour to leave the school parking lot, even though there was a policeman directing traffic, primarily because the main road outside the school was so backed-up... I had been concerned about ice, but it soon became clear that the elements were nothing compared to the surrounding drivers. I’m convinced that all of us would have made it home at least five hours sooner if we only waited our turn and resisted the urge to drive through a green light if there wasn’t enough room to keep the intersection open. Thank goodness I had a full tank of gas…and went to the bathroom when I had the chance. “As I rolled along with my carpool at a rate of less than 1 mile per hour, we were passed by groups of school kids wearing backpacks, and fathers pulling children in makeshift hamper sleds, and it became clear to us that there would be no snow frolicking today. The boy I was driving convinced me (and his mother, via his cellphone), to let him out of the car to walk the last quarter mile home. We had been sitting in a line of vehicles waiting to turn left onto Mount Vernon Highway for more than 30 minutes. I gave him my cap and gloves, and his prudence probably saved us two additional hours in the car. “In the amount of time it would have taken me to drive to Florida, I covered 4 1/2 miles. I made it safely home with my boys. They were frustrated. I was exhausted.” SS


AFTER THE STORM

Snow shoes? Joey Carbonara, left, and Chandler Parks, sophomores at St. Pius X Catholic High School, were spotted hauling their basketball gear along Spalding Drive, near Temple Emanu-El in Sandy Springs, on Jan. 29. Carbonara and Parks were walking in order to meet Carbonara’s father so he would not have to drive down an icy hill to pick them up. The two said they were supposed to get a ride from a friend’s mom on Jan. 28 since school let out early. However, icy conditions on Spalding made the drive treacherous, so instead of getting a ride home, their friend’s mom took them to her house, where they stayed the night. The next day was spent “playing video games indoors,” said Carbonara, and running on the icy roads outdoors, said Parks. “It was fun,” Parks added. ELIZABETH WILKES

Inspiration Originates In Your Heart

Holy Innocents’ Episcopal Church opened a shelter for stranded motorists. Rector Michael Sullivan found himself turning to social media to help people find their way in the storm. “In the midst of this storm, no committee was necessary. No meeting was held. No agenda prepared. No, social media and its immediate power to connect and mobilize people for action is the lesson. “Within the first hours, a citizen in Atlanta set up a Twitter and Facebook profile for people stranded in cars. The group, SnowedOutAtlanta, established by Michelle Sollicito, had Rector Michael thousands of followers within minutes. It immediately became Sullivan the chief means of communication for those with smartphones who were stranded in cars. Water and food were coordinated via this amazing resource. “Our parish opened as a shelter. It was just the right thing to do. But just like SnowedOutAtlanta, the ministry started taking on a new dimension via social media. We connected with our metro Atlanta city, Sandy Springs, via Facebook and Twitter. We became an official city shelter because I talked to Mayor Rusty Paul via Facebook messaging. We repeatedly posted we were open, and news spread as a contagion. “By 2 in the morning, I was using Facebook to instruct walking motorists how to get to the church. I was also assuring parents that the shelter was safe, and sons and daughters were OK. I became an online pastor. Soon, I was using Twitter and other outlets to ask for food, water, blankets and pillows from neighbors who might raid their pantries and closets. “And it all worked. People responded with such generosity that we will make a run to the food pantry as this city returns to normal. Within an hour of my initial posts, we had hot-cooked oatmeal, stockpots of soups, baby food and formula, toiletries, needed medication, and the list goes on. Social media became the way to connect faith and action, people to people, relationship to relationship. “Some of my colleagues laugh about the church on Facebook and Twitter; I’ve even heard some say the church must resist such relationless forms of communication. Personally, I’ve known for a few years now that a good 90 percent of pastoral information comes via Facebook. “Now I know that faith goes into action via these same avenues when a disaster strikes. These forms of communication saved lives in Atlanta, and made a difference for a community of faith’s response to disaster. ... So, while other people are pointing fingers, I am busy training mine to text better.”

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AFTER THE STORM

The ‘storm’ in 140 Characters Twitter lit up on Jan. 28 and Jan. 29 as the snow storm rolled into the metro area. Here’s a sampling of how things unfolded:

Sandy Springs, GA @SandySpringsGA Jan 28 National Weather Service issued winter storm warning. Dusting to sev inches of snow expected. Forecast models not conclusive. Sandy Springs, GA @SandySpringsGA Jan 28 Traffic on most main surface streets in Sandy Springs has slowed to a crawl. Neighborhood streets are icy. Avoid travel where possible. Brookhaven Police @BrookhavenGA_PD Jan 28 All roads throughout Brookhaven are heavily congested at this time with conditions becoming more severe. DeKalb Co. Schools @DeKalbSchools Jan 28 All DeKalb County schools will be dismissed early today. Teachers & staff will remain at schools until all children are on buses/picked up. Atlanta Police Dept @Atlanta_Police Jan 28 APD is aware of the traffic situations around the city and we are working with various departments to resolve the issues. FultonCountySchools @FultonCoSchools Jan 28 Today’s weather pattern has come in faster than initially forecasted. The school day will be ending at 1:45 p.m. Georgia DOT @GADeptofTrans Jan 28 Hazardous conditions are spreading throughout Northeast GA. Crews are active in the affected areas. GrowBrookhaven @GrowBrookhaven Jan 28 Attn: #Brookhaven ~ Dresden Drive is a sheet of ice & shouldn’t be attempted. Go home. Dunwoody Police @DunwoodyPolice Jan 28 The volume of traffic everywhere is extremely high & all roads are gridlocked. We have an extended police response time. City of Dunwoody, GA @DunwoodyGA Jan 28 For stranded motorists: First Baptist Church Atlanta is providing room to stranded motorists at 4400 N. Peachtree Rd., Atlanta, Georgia. City of Brookhaven @BrookhavenGaGov Jan 28 Big thanks you to @BrookhavenGA_PD for working around the clock to help motorists in #Brookhaven stay safe on icy roads. Governor Nathan Deal @GovernorDeal Jan 28 Gov. Deal declares state of emergency related to the winter storm, delays opening of state government until noon tomorrow. FultonCountyGeorgia @FultonInfo Jan 28 Home Depot has announced that many of its stores are also available overnight for motorists who are stranded. ATL Public Schools @apsupdate Jan 28 Emergency Update: #APS will ‘shelter in place’ for the remainder of evening 1/28/14 Kasim Reed @KasimReed Jan 29 Throughout the night, our crews have been working to salt and sand roads and bridges. We will continue all day until everyone is home safe. –Compiled by Collin Kelley

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AFTER THE STORM

Cities assess storm responsiveness CONTINUED FROM PAGE 1

or Rusty Paul said. Dunwoody Police Chief Billy Grogan, who worked more than 30 hours straight during the storm Jan. 28 and 29, said his staff, too, would review their actions to look for ways to improve. The storm that blew in Jan. 28 closed schools and created traffic tie-ups so bad that people abandoned vehicles to walk, or spent dozens of hours sitting in cars waiting for traffic to clear. Shelters opened at Holy Innocents’ Episcopal School and Congregation Or Hadash, Paul said, and people spent the night at several businesses. Some children were stuck overnight at schools. Sandy Springs City Manager John McDonough said 334 mortorists stayed in shelters. Dunwoody police Sgt. Fidel Espinoza delivered gas and blankets to stranded motorists using an ATV. He said most officers ended up staying the night, sleeping at City Hall. “We ran out of cots and people ended up sleeping on the floor,” he said. Despite sharp criticism leveled at state government officials for their actions during and prior to the storm, several local civic leaders seemed pleased overall with their community’s response. “Across the board, we had a great response,” McDonough said. Paul said Sandy Springs officials got a jump on the storm. “We pre-treated the roads around the hospitals before the snow started as a precaution and also targeted schools to help bus traffic,” he wrote. “The city issued updates at least every two hours throughout the emergency period, using social media and email chains to get crucial information to our citizens. ... The council members did a magnificent job of distributing this emergency information to people in their districts, which helped many people avoid impassable areas in their struggle to get home.” Volunteers jumped in to help, providing stranded motor-

ists with water, food and shelter. In Dunwoody, Tony Delmechi said people stopped in at his home for cocoa and bathroom breaks, and a group spent the night in his basement. In Brookhaven, Joel Callahan fed and walked dogs for a neighbor he didn’t know after posting an offer to help on a community bulletin board. Part of the reason for the gridlock, Grogan pointed out, was that many people were at work when the storm hit and were headed home to neighboring communities, so they all were trying to drive on the same roads. “Everybody wanted to leave at the same time,” Grogan said. Grogan said Dunwoody police received 222 service calls in 18 hours. The department usually receives about 75 calls in 24 hours, he said. McDonough said Chatcomm, the city’s 911 center, received 4,062 calls for service between noon Jan. 28 and 6 p.m. Jan. 29. “I can’t say enough about our staff ...,” Grogan said on the department’s Facebook page. “Not once did I hear an officer complain about the harsh working conditions, the workload or the long hours.” Paul said public response to city officials has been favorable, too. “I received more than 300 emails and Facebook posts thanking us for keeping them informed about the situation and activities that occurred, while commending our first responders and public works personnel,” he said. Grogan wrote on Facebook that his department will soon begin looking for ways to improve reaction to future storms. “In hindsight, the two things that would have helped the most would have been if the schools had closed Tuesday [Jan. 28], and if many of the businesses had closed as well and their employees had stayed home,” Grogan wrote. “Fortunately, we can all learn from events such as this and improve upon our future responses.”

JOE EARLE

Baby, you can’t drive your car On Jan. 28, traffic gridlocked around Atlanta, including this stretch of Hammond Drive in Sandy Springs.

Jobie Ponder and 15 other senior citizens who set out for an outing in Atlanta found themselves facing a harrowing trip back to Sandy Springs. “We went to a lovely luncheon at a Chinese restaurant. While eating, the beautiful snow started coming slowly down. Quickly loading the bus we started the 8-mile trip to our home. It took us eight hours before we reached a gas station with a bathroom. It took seven more hours before the bus arrived home. Of course seniors adjust to many different circumstances. That’s how we got to be seniors. There was joke-telling and laughing at anything you could think of. We sang on the bus many times. The one we sang the most was “Show Me The Way To Go Home.”

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COMMENTARY Reporter Newspapers Our mission is to provide our readers with fresh and engaging information about life in their communities. Published by Springs Publishing LLC 6065 Roswell Road, Suite 225 Sandy Springs, GA 30328 Phone: 404-917-2200 • Fax: 404-917-2201 Brookhaven Reporter | Buckhead Reporter Dunwoody Reporter | Sandy Springs Reporter www.ReporterNewspapers.net Atlanta INtown www.AtlantaINtownPaper.com

CONTACT US Founder & Publisher Steve Levene stevelevene@reporternewspapers.net Editorial Managing Editor Joe Earle joeearle@reporternewspapers.net Intown Editor: Collin Kelley Staff Writer: Melissa Weinman Copy Editor: Diane L. Wynocker Creative and Production Director of Creative & Interactive Media Christopher North chrisnorth@reporternewspapers.net Graphic Designer: Walter Czachowski Advertising Director of Sales Development Amy Arno amyarno@reporternewspapers.net Senior Account Executive Janet Porter Account Executives Susan Lesesne Lenie Sacks Sales Consultants David Burleson Linda Howell Office Manager Deborah Davis deborahdavis@reporternewspapers.net Contributors J.D. Moor, Phil Mosier, Martha Nodar

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Allowing ‘new city’ school systems would increase flexibility Flexibility appears to be the new buzzword in education. It is possible that we have finally hit on an idea that we hope will take off like wildfire and, more importantly, be here for the long run. There is no arguing that teachers need flexibility in a classroom, through curriculum and instructional implementation, to meet the needs of individual classes and students. Schoolhouses benefit from flexibility too, in order to build schoolwide programs that match their student body’s needs. In various ways, school districts also benefit from flexibility. Currently the state has embraced flexibility by encouraging school systems to adopt programs that allow them to waive certain requirements in order to build programs that will support their district’s needs and goals. Flexibility not only exists within program development, but is also an important tool in system organization and structure. The Georgia Constitution provides one-sided system flexibility through allowing for school system consolidation. In certain cases, very small school districts may see an opportunity to improve upon academic and extracurricular programs, and strengthen financial management through consolidating with another school district. However, on the other end of the spectrum, when school systems are too large, there is no flexibility to deconsolidate. This moves school-system flexibility into uncharted territory, as deconsolidation has never been broached. That is because only now, nearly 69 years after the Georgia Constitution capped the number of school systems in Georgia, are we realizing that just as there are school systems that can be too small to succeed, there are also school systems that are too large to succeed. With the average school system nationwide being 3,500 students, it isn’t shocking that this conversation is not being heard more often. Super-sized systems are truly in the minority. However, when you consider that in a school system the size of DeKalb County you could fit 28 average-sized school systems, it seems deserved that this conversation be moved to the forefront. To determine when a school system has grown too large to successfully offer an education that maximizes each student’s potential, you would look to the following: When a school system loses the ability to find the pulse of the individual stu-

dent or accurately determine a schoolhouse’s needs (and more importantly meet those needs); when financial management becomes mismanagement because of an inability to effectively and efficiently match those dollars in a way that will result in successful outcomes; when the administration flow chart looks more like a fifth-generation family tree; or when media covERIKA erage seems lost in a labyrinth of HARRIS continual hope for improvement with results that show a downward GUEST COLUMN trend, the need for the flexibility of deconsolidation becomes critical. There have been many studies pointing out the benefits of systems of manageable sizes. Among the measurable and observable positive outcomes are: higher graduation rates, maximizing of financial resources, increases in teacher satisfaction, increases in parental engagement, increased cross-level communication, and an increased sense of community. Providing for the deconsolidation of super-sized systems can allow more students, parents, teachers and districts to realize these benefits. House Resolution 486, put forth by Rep. Tom Taylor (RDunwoody), is the constitutional amendment that seeks to reintroduce the flexibility of school system deconsolidation into the constitution. It provides the opportunity for cities formed after 2005, and any other cities that share a contiguous border, to form municipal school systems. By allowing for the opportunity to create municipal school systems of a manageable size, these new school districts can capitalize on the full benefits of flexibility on all levels in education: instructional differentiation in the classroom, program innovation in the schoolhouse and district structural flexibility. That provides a winning combination for everyone. Erika Harris, a Dunwoody resident, is co-chair of Georgians for Local Area School Systems, or GLASS, a group organized by parents to lobby for passage of House Resolution 486.

On the record Read these articles from our other editions online at ReporterNewspapers.net. “We think that park doesn’t come close to its potential. If you’re trying to create a walk-able urban place, you need gathering places. That’s not a gathering place right now.” –Buckhead CID Executive Director Jim Durrett, on plans to renovate Loudermilk Park, located at the intersection of Roswell and Peachtree roads

“We actually bought the house because of its proximity to the nature center. I think we saw the house, saw the back yard, bought the house, and then went inside and looked at the rest of it.” –Alan Mothner, executive director of the Dunwoody Nature Center, on moving to Dunwoody.

“Our vision came from an existing parks system. It’s kind of like we looked in our backyard and found we all had these hidden treasures and no one was really utilizing them.” –Chad Boles, president of the Briarwood Park Conservancy in Brookhaven, on volunteers working to revive the city’s parks.

“We felt that that was what God wanted us to do. He made it clear to us that others needed to carry the mission forward.” –Heiskell School Director Cyndie Heiskell on plans to close the 65-year-old private Christian school in Buckhead .

Do you have something to say? Send your letters to editor@reporternewspapers.net

FEB. 7 – FEB. 20, 2014 | www.ReporterNewspapers.net

SS


COMMENTARY

All choked up about this thing called love When my twins were but elementary school boys, one of them developed a crush on a girl. Upon learning this sweet tidbit, I did what I do in embarrassing situations -- pry information from the twin brother. So I asked twin brother, “Does she like him?” To which he responded enthusiastically, “Yes! It’s like a miracle!” Even at the tender age of 10, my son recognized the simple wonder of requited love: that returned affection is a phenomenon not to be taken lightly. It doesn’t happen every day, it doesn’t even happen every lifetime, and if and when it does happen, it is a small miracle. So what is this thing called love, and how does it stay alive? Four children and a couple of decades after my own wedding day, I feel like I should have some answers. But I don’t. I do, however, have some thoughts. I heard in a high school English class that “love is friendship caught fire” and I have yet to come across a tidier definition. It has taken a whole heap of friendship and just enough sparks to keep this marriage going. It has also been said that love isn’t an emotion, it’s a commitment, and a recent viewing of “Fiddler on the Roof” at a neighborhood playhouse brought that statement to my mind. It was the song, “Do You Love Me?” that did it. In the song, the protagonist Tevye asks Golde, his wife of 25 years by an arranged marriage, “Do you love me?” There is such poignancy in that question, in the fact that after 25 years of marriage he must ask, and that she avoids answering. She responds with a list of domestic chores that she has done dutifully throughout their life together. He continues prodding, and Golde replies, “For

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25 years I’ve lived with him, fought him, starved with him. For 25 years, my bed is his. If that’s not love, what is?” Finally, they ROBIN JEAN both admit MARIE CONTE that yes, they do love each ROBIN’S NEST other after all, and that (this is the part that really chokes me up) “after 25 years… it’s nice to know.” I cried, as I do every time I hear it. And I realize that commitment is exactly what Golde was singing about. Commitment was the glue that held those two initial strangers together, and from that commitment, love grew. Something else about the lyrics struck me: That period of time that seems so noteworthy when set to music and sung onstage is the milestone that my husband and I have just hit. I think now of our own ups and downs, the years raising children together, the years of supporting each other in our trials and achievements, of working out our differences…the years spent learning who we married. And I am astounded that a quarter of a century has passed like a wisp. This past June, my husband and I celebrated our 25th anniversary. It’s been a bit like a marathon…and a lot like a miracle. Robin Jean Marie Conte is a writer and mother of four who lives in Dunwoody. She can be contacted at robinjm@earthlink.net.

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FEB. 7 – FEB. 20, 2014 | 9


HOME & REAL ESTATE

EXPERIENCE

A FAMILY VACATION

Editor’s Note: This issue introduces our new Home & Real Estate section, which includes articles on neighborhoods, information on home sales and news of the real estate business in our communities. We hope this type of coverage will give you a deeper understanding of your commmunity. The section will appear regularly in all four Reporter Newspapers.

THAT WILL GO DOWN IN HISTORY

The Hillsdale neighborhood is located off North Druid Hills Road, near Cross Keys High School, in the southern portion of Brookhaven. The area is close to interstates and shopping in both Buckhead and Brookhaven. GOOGLE MAPS

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Ken Storr knew he would love living in Hillsdale from the first moment he Where saw his house. You “We pulled up and I told the real esLive tate agent you don’t even have to take me inside. I’m going to buy it,” Storr said. “We’ve lived there since 1990.” ty during the first weekend of OctoThe Hillsdale neighborhood is locatber, said David Schurer, president of ed off of North Druid Hills Road near the neighborhood association. “We do Cross Keys High School in the southa really awesome Oktoberfest neighborern portion of the city of Brookhavhood event,” Schurer said. en. Neighbors say He said the event they love the locaalways includes great tion, which is confood and live enter“You feel like you live in venient to interstate tainment, which for a different time, where highways, shopping the past several years in Buckhead and the has been provided by everybody used to walk Brookhaven commuhis own three-piece the streets with the kids nity, which has develband. and dogs. To me it’s oped a lot in the past Schurer said Hillsfew years. dale has many senior like an old-fashioned Established in the residents. ‘50s neighborhood.” 1950s, the neighbor“The neighborhood is comprised hood is definitely a – KEN STORR mostly of ranch- style little bit older. But houses with large some of those peolawns. ple are leaving, truStorr said he’s always been drawn to ly leaving this world, or they’re moving that design, which he describes as vito assisted living or senior citizens placbrant and modern. He collects mid-cenes, so we’re seeing things change,” Schtury furniture too, he said. “It’s just a urer said. very interesting era,” Storr said. Storr, who is 60, said he has really enStorr said there’s something nostalgic joyed getting to know the older residents about the neighborhood, too. of the neighborhood, some of whom are “You feel like you live in a different the original owners of the homes. One time, where everybody used to walk the streets with the kids and dogs,” he said. Is there something special about “To me it’s like an old-fashioned ‘50s your neighborhood? Let us know at neighborhood.” editor@reporternewspapers.net One of the things that brings neighbors together is the annual block par-


HOME & REAL ESTATE of the neighbors he was closest to passed away this year at age 96. “Some of our best friends ended up being some of the older people that lived in the neighborhood,” Storr said. Throughout the city of Brookhaven, there’s been a building boom as people purchase older homes in neighborhoods like Ashford Park and either tear them down or renovate. That transformation hasn’t reached Hillsdale. “It hasn’t had the newer-style homes that have gone in, say, Brookhaven Heights, where you see a lot more teardowns and rebuilds,” Schurer said. Storr said a few new homes have been built on Hillsdale lots. But he hopes the look of the neighborhood he loves so much won’t change too drastically. “I’d have to admit I’d like to see our neighborhood stay intact,” Storr said. “But that’s the Atlanta way – we tear down and build new.” Storr said one thing is for sure: He plans to stay in his beloved Hillsdale home for years to come. “This is it. It’s home,” Storr said. SPECIAL

From left, David Schurer, Gary Hunnicutt and David Selden perform at Hillsdale’s annual Oktoberfest block party as Santiago Sickler dances along.

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FEB. 7 – FEB. 20, 2014 | 11


HOME & REAL ESTATE

Real estate snapshot: Single family home sales Sandy Springs: 30327, 30328, 30350 High Low Median

# BRs 7 3 5

Sq. Ft. 11,000 1,340 4,057

List Price $2,495,000 234,000 595,000

Sales Price $2,170,750 200,300 554,000

Days on Market 262 3 47

Sales Price $2,400,000 322,000 755,000

Days on Market 217 2 67

Sales Price $705,000 225,000 354,000

Days on Market 127 0 20

Sales Price $411,000 120,000 332,500

Days on Market 188 2 53

Buckhead: 30305, 30327 High Low Median

# BRs 6 3 4

Sq. Ft. 7,853 1,664 2,998

List Price $2,500,000 309,900 749,000

Brookhaven: 30319 High Low Median

# BRs 5 2 3

Sq. Ft. 3,720 984 2,081

List Price $850,000 244,900 375,000

Dunwoody: 30338 High Low Median

# BRs 6 3 4

Sq. Ft. 3,848 1,265 2,812

List Price $425,000 150,000 336,450

This information is compiled from First Multiple Listing Service (FMLS) from Jan. 1 - Feb. 4, 2014. It is deemed reliable but is not guaranteed, and is not a complete list of activity. Data provided by Judy Soden, Coldwell Banker Residential Brokerage Sandy Springs office.

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The map above, prepared by the Atlanta Regional Commission using demographic data from ESRI, shows areas with these median home values:

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HOME & REAL ESTATE

Luxury high rise, hot metro neighborhoods, new projects Mitch Kaminer, associate broker with RE/MAX Paramount Properties and owner of Kaminer Property Management, has been honored with the 2013 Realtor of the Year Award by the Atlanta Board Mitch Kaminer of Realtors. Todd Emerson, senior vice president and managing broker of Harry Norman, Realtors Atlanta Perimeter and Blue Ridge Offices, was named 2014 President of the Atlanta Board of Realtors. A groundbreaking ceremony was held Jan. 30 for a new $72 million luxury high-rise in Buckhead. SkyHouse Buckhead is being developed by Novare Group and BastsonCook Development Company. Located on Stratford Road behind Maggiano’s, the 26-story, 362-unit high-rise apartment community will be connected to the Buckhead MARTA station and the west side of Ga. 400 by a new, underconstruction pedestrian bridge spanning the highway. The building will feature residential units of one, two and three bedrooms, with high-end finishes and floor-to-ceiling glass. The “SkyHouse” will be on the 26th floor with a clubroom, fitness area, and outdoor plazas that include an infinity swimming pool, fireplaces, covered outdoor lounges and 360-degree views. The building is expected to be complete in early 2015. Novare has already developed similar SkyHouse projects in Midtown Atlanta and in Dallas. Traton Homes has announced the development of The Enclave at Dunwoody, which features six, single-family “executive luxury homes” priced in the $700,000s. The community is located not far from I-285 on Happy Hollow Road. www.TratonHomes.com for more. Online real estate brokerage firm Redfin recently released its Top Ten Hottest Neighborhoods of 2014 list and the Morningside-Lenox Park neighborhood is number one in the Atlanta market and third nationwide. The Springfield and Dunwoody Club Forest neighborhoods are also in the local Top 5. Redfin bases its list on homebuyer searches on Redfin.com leading into the new year. Page views, “favorited” homes and insights by Redfin agents all play into the selection process. Nationally, Morningside-Lenox Park ranked with up-and-coming neighborhoods in

San Francisco, Los Angeles, Washington D.C., Las Vegas, Austin, Seattle, Portland, Denver and Chicago. iStar Residential has announced a new sales team for The Residences at Mandarin Oriental, Atlanta. Karen Rodriguez of Dorsey Alston Realtors will lead the revamped sales efforts. The Residences currently are being built out with contemporary, high-end finishes and built-in fireplaces with marble surrounds. Each unit will also feature a 36-inch Viking gas grill as well as a fireplace on its balcony. The team is also revamping the common areas with modern color palettes and marble floors. iStar has partnered with local architectural firm Harrison Design Associates to craft unique layouts that showcase the spectacular views. Additionally, plans are under way to build out all the remaining unfinished shells. Harrison Design also designed a three-bedroom model home

B RIEFS

that was staged on the 45th floor to demonstrate The Residences’ new contemporary appearance. For more, visit www.moresidencesatlanta.com. Harry Norman, Realtors has relocated its Buckhead Northwest office to 4401 Northside Parkway, Suite 250, Atlanta, 30327, within the new One Riverside live, work and play community. A proposed office tower in Buckhead would feature a shimmering glass exterior that would be the first of its kind in Atlanta, according to a report in Curbed Atlanta. The 30-story tower would be the third and final building in the Alliance Center complex near the intersection of Lenox Road and Ga. 400. Ac-

cording to commercial real estate firm Tishman Speyer, the exterior design is a “faceted glass curtain wall system.” The building would offer 500,000 square feet of leasable space. Rockhaven Homes has announced that framing is under way at Brookhaven’s newest luxury townhome community, The Haven on Briarwood. Located on a quiet street and surrounded by mature hardwoods, the development features three-story townhomes with shake, brick and stone exteriors; two-car garages, 10-foot ceilings, gourmet kitchens and more. For more information, visit rockhavenga.com. Harry Norman, Realtors Buckhead North Office has announced the formation of a new team, The Waters Group. A native Atlantan, Teresa Waters is a consistent top-producing agent and a life member of the Multi-Million Dollar Sales Club. Clayton Howard has joined The Waters Group as a new Realtor in Harry Norman’s Buckhead North Office. As a member of the Millennial Agent program with the Buckhead North Office, Howard will serve the younger market of homebuyers and sellers. For more information, visit www.TeresaWaters.HarryNorman.com.

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out & about

Student credits professor for reviving her interest in art BY MARTHA NODAR Classic and modern landscape paintings in a new exhibit now on display at the Oglethorpe University Museum of Art caught the eye of Oglethorpe freshman Jordan Michels, who credits her art history professor for “reviving her interest in art.” The “Sky Light: Landscapes, Traditional and Contemporary” exhibit, which runs through March 9, consists in part of paintings and lithographs from Impressionists and Post-Impressionists Eugène Boudin, Armand Guillaumin, Édouard Manet, Maxime Maufra, Camille Pissarro and others capturing the French countryside. Influenced by Japanese prints, Manet’s 19th century oil on canvas, “Le Dejeuner sur J’Herbe,” (Luncheon on the Grass) is one of the paintings in the show and one of Manet’s most controversial pieces. “The greenery surrounding this composition serves as a natural frame, and makes me think it is perhaps a warm day in late spring,” Michels said. “I want to know more about the female figure in white garments depicted in the center background.” Manet’s piece holds a contrast to Maufra’s 19th century, “La Glace Etans

de Ville d’Avray” (The Frozen Pond in the Villa of Avray), portraying a wintery scene. Maufra’s expertise in marine painting does not go wasted in this composition where the water literally takes center stage. “In this piece, the action is in the foreground with the implied movement of the water,” Michels said. “There is also a contrast of warmth and cold between the snow depicted in the left foreground and the dark green leaves of the trees bordering the edge of the water toward the right background.” Michels, who is majoring in international studies and minoring in Japanese culture, praises her art history professor Jeffrey Collins for what he brings to the classroom. “Dr. Collins is not a traditional teacher,” she said. “He likes to engage his students in conversation, and we have the freedom to express ourselves.” In addition to teaching art history and anthropology to Oglethorpe students, Collins also oversees the university’s study abroad program, which allows Oglethorpe students to travel to other universities around the world and study there for a semester. Michels said she hopes to travel to Japan during her

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sophomore year. Every summer Collins organizes a trip to Europe for Oglethorpe students and alumni to experience first-hand the works of art they may have discussed in class and the unique features of different cultures. “Our program transforms students into highly independent thinkers and doers, develops global citizens, and promotes deep understanding of other cultures and languages,” Collins said.

MARTHA NODAR

Oglethorpe freshman Jordan Michels looks at Manet’s 19th century oil on canvas, “Le Dejeuner sur J’Herbe” (Luncheon on the Grass).

What: Sky Light: Landscapes, Traditional & Contemporary Where: Oglethorpe University Museum of Art Philip Weltner Library, 4484 Peachtree Road, Brookhaven When: Now through March 9 Regular Hours: Tuesday-Sunday: noon—5 p.m. General Admission: $5 (Free for children under 12) Closed on Mondays and school holidays Parking: Free For more information: 404-364-8555, museum.oglethorpe.edu

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ception for Spruill Art Gallery’s exhibition “Looks Good on Paper,” showcasing original works on paper in a variety of mediums. Reception and show are free, and open to the public. Exhibition runs through April 19. 4681 Ashford Dunwoody Rd., Dunwoody, 30338. To learn more, go to: http:// spruillgallery.blogspot.com or call 770-394-4019.

Love Songs Sunday, Feb. 16, 4:30-6:30 p.m. – The Heritage Winter Classics series concludes when trumpeter and band leader Joe Gransden takes the stage for a Valentine’s Day concert with special guest Francine Reed. Enjoy classic love songs from Broadway, jazz, American standards and film. $5 per person. Held indoors. Park on Sandy Springs Place or in the Sandy Springs United Methodist Church Activities Center parking lot. Call 404-851-9111, x4 or email: events@heritagesandysprings.org for details. Heritage Hall, 6110 Bluestone Rd., Sandy Springs, 30328. www.heritagesandysprings.org.

Civil Rights Friday, Feb. 21, 6:30-8:30 p.m. – The Abernathy Arts Center presents “Women, Agents of Change in the American Civil Rights Movement,” a documentary photography exhibit by Dr. Doris Derby, civil rights activist, educator and artist. Opening reception and exhibition are free, and open to the public. Show continues through March 29. 254 Johnson Ferry Rd., NW, Sandy Springs, 30328. Call 404-613-6172 or visit: www.fultonarts.org for additional information.

Marion Grodin Saturday, Feb. 22, 8 p.m. – Marion Grodin,

daughter of Charles Grodin, brings her wit to the Marcus Jewish Community Center of Atlanta. Grodin recently appeared at the MJCCA’s book festival. Tickets, $15–$22. Available online at www.atlantajcc.org/boxoffice, by calling 678-812-4002, or in person at the MJCCA’s sports or front desks. 5342 Tilly Mill Rd., Dunwoody, 30338.

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“Bring on Spring” Sunday, Feb. 23, 3 p.m. – Lauda Musicam of

Atlanta performs Medieval and Renaissance music on instruments appropriate for the time period at the Church of the New Covenant. The group showcases music written for the annual change in seasons in a concert “Bring on the Spring: A French & English Celebration of Springtime.” Free; donations appreciated. 3330 Chestnut Dr., Doraville, 30340. To learn more, call 404-314-1891 or go to: www.laudamusicam.org.

LET’S LEARN

Artery Disease Wednesday, Feb. 12, 7 p.m. – Dr. Joseph Ricotta speaks at Dunwoody United Methodist Church. His areas of expertise include aortic and peripheral aneurysms, peripheral artery disease (PAD), renal and mesenteric disease, venous disease and thoracic outlet syndrome. Free, and open to all. No registration needed. Contact cathy.wright@ dunwoodyumc.org or call 770-394-0675 ext. 112 with questions and/or for free childcare reservations. 1548 Mount Vernon Rd., Dunwoody, 30338.

Grant Proposals & Budgets Saturday, Feb. 15, 12:30-2:30 p.m. – Learn

how proposals fit into the overall grant seeking process; what to include in a standard proposal to a foundation; tips for making your proposal stronger; what funders expect to see; communication tips; and more. Free. For adult audiences. Registration required by visiting: http://foundationcenter.org/atlanta. Sandy Springs Branch Library, 395 Mount Vernon Highway, Sandy Springs, 30328. Call 404303-6130 or email: comments@co.fulton.ga.us for additional details.

Minimum Wage Saturday, Feb. 15, 2 p.m. – Raise the

Minimum Wage, Sandy Springs, holds its inaugural meeting in Mt. Vernon Presbyterian Church’s Fellowship Hall. Attendees will discuss why the wage should be raised and how to encourage elected leaders to raise it. Free and open to the public. Questions? Visit: http://sandyspringsminimumwage.weebly.com or email: don. mcadam@yahoo.com. 471 Mount Vernon Highway, Sandy Springs, 30328.

Chemo Brain Wednesday, Feb. 19, 12-2 p.m. – “Chemo brain” is a phenomenon associated with cognitive dysfunction. The American Cancer Society says “people who have chemo brain may find themselves unable to concentrate on their work or unable to juggle multiple tasks.” Join others for a free, informative discussion about the signs, symptoms and physiology behind “Chemo brain.” Lunch provided. For members of the Cancer Support Community. RSVP to 404-843-1880. 5775 Peachtree Dunwoody Rd., Suite C-225, Atlanta, 30342. www.cscatlanta.org.

Civil War Wednesday, Feb. 19, 8 p.m. – James McPher-

son reflects on his career as America’s chief interpreter of the Civil War. Moderated by Stephen Berry, Gregory Professor of the Civil War Era at the University of Georgia, the evening features a free-ranging interview in which McPherson discuses the war, its legacy, and its changing place in American memory. $5 for Atlanta History Center members; $10 for non-members. Reservations required by calling 404-814-4150 or going online to: www.atlantahistorycenter.com/Lectures. 130 West Paces Ferry Rd., NW, Atlanta, 30305.


FOR KIDS

Black History Month

Valentine Stories Tuesday, Feb. 11, 10:15-10:45 a.m. – Chil-

dren will enjoy Valentine’s Day stories in three story time sessions. Toddlers age 1 at 10:15 a.m.; toddlers age 2 at 11 a.m.; preschoolers ages 3-5 at 11:45 a.m. Free and open to all. Buckhead Branch Library, 269 Buckhead Ave., NE, Atlanta, 30305. Call 404814-3500 or email: comments@co.fulton.ga.us for information.

Bricks 4 Kidz Wednesday, Feb. 12, 4:30-5:30 p.m. – Program

uses LEGO bricks to provide a fun, multi-sensory and imaginative hands-on learning experience. Free and open to the public. For elementary and preschool youth. Space is limited. Registration required and started Jan. 4. Call 404-303-6130, email: leah.germon@fultoncountyga.gov or visit the Sandy Springs Branch Library to sign up or with questions. 395 Mount Vernon Highway, Sandy Springs, 30328.

Short Film Workshop Saturday, Feb. 15, 3-6 p.m. – Learn how

to create your own animated short film with the help of professionals and artists from local Association Internationale du Film d’Animation (ASIFA). Free, and the public is welcome. Registration required. Open to those in middle and high school. Sandy Springs Branch Library, in the Meeting Room, 395 Mount Vernon Highway, Sandy Springs, 30328. Call 404303-6130 or email: marlan.brinkley@fultoncountyga.gov to sign up or to get details.

Kids in the Kitchen Saturday, Feb. 15, 4-5 p.m. – Kids of all ages

are invited to come learn about health and wellness in a hands-on environment that focuses on preparing healthy foods. Free. Open to the community. Sandy Springs Branch Library, in the Story Time Room, 395 Mount Vernon Highway, Sandy Springs, 30328. Email: leah.germon@fultoncountyga.gov or call 404-303-6130 to learn more.

Wednesday, Feb. 19, 4:30-5:30 p.m. – Join Out of the Box Art Studio in celebrating Black History Month by creating an African art project. Free and open to all. Appropriate for ages 6 and up. Space is limited. Registration required and started Feb. 1. Email: leah.germon@fultoncountyga.gov, call 404-303-6130 or visit the Sandy Springs Branch Library to sign up or with questions. In the Story Time Room, 395 Mount Vernon Highway, Sandy Springs, 30328.

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Friday, Feb. 21, 5:45-9 p.m. – Calling all girls!

Hang out, eat pizza and play games when the library is closed! For girls ages 8 and 9 ONLY. Space is very limited. Free, and open to the community. Registration required and started Feb. 1. Email: leah.germon@fultoncountyga.gov, call 404-303-6130 or visit the Sandy Springs Branch Library to sign up. 395 Mount Vernon Highway, Sandy Springs, 30328.

Drop-In Craft Saturday, Feb. 22, 12-4 p.m. – Children ages

4-12 can drop in any time between 12-4 p.m. and make a unique Black History Month craft as a parent and child activity. Free. Open to the public. Buckhead Branch Library, 269 Buckhead Ave., NE, Atlanta, 30305. Email: comments@co.fulton.ga.us or call 404-814-3500 to learn more.

e-Textiles for Teens Saturday, Feb. 22, 4-6 p.m. – Learn how to use conductive thread to make your gloves light up with LEDs! No previous experience with electronics necessary. Free; the public is welcome. Appropriate for middle and high school youth. Registration required by calling 404-303-6130 or emailing: marlan.brinkley@fultoncountyga.gov. Sandy Springs Branch Library, in the Meeting Room, 395 Mount Vernon Highway, Sandy Springs, 30328.

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ing construction at North Springs Charter High School has put some young plants in peril. Join other volunteers in saving plants and money by transplanting them. Come in work clothes, with gloves and a shovel. Free, and all are welcome. In case of heavy rain, event rescheduled for March 15. 7447 Roswell Rd., Sandy Springs, 30328. Contact Sandra Jewell at 770-395-9918 or go to: www.friendsofnorthsprings.com for details.

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FEB. 7 – FEB. 20, 2014 | 17


Summer Camps

To advertise in the March 7 Camps section call 404-917-2200 x130.

Camp Grasshopper Camp Grasshopper summer day camp engages preschoolers in an adventure of discovery. With a different theme each weekly session, camp staff lead indoor and outdoor activities that are fun, creative and targeted specifically to the interests and abilities of boys and girls ages 3 to 6. Throughout the week, campers enjoy arts and crafts, music, story time, creative play, drama, sports and nature study, with lunch and playground time each day.

For more information, visit atlantaspeechschool.org/grasshopper or call 404-233-5332. 3160 Northside Pkwy., NW | Atlanta, Georgia 30327

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SESSION I: JUNE 2 - JUNE 27 SESSION II: JULY 7 - AUGUST 1 The Camp at St. Martin’s offers fun for children in rising Pre-K through 8th grade. The Camp at St. Martin’s 3110-A Ashford Dunwoody Road Atlanta, GA 30319 (404) 237-4260, ext. 380 www.stmartinschool.org Owned and managed by St. Martin’s Episcopal School. Director of Summer Programs: Mark McDaniel

FEB. 7 – FEB. 20, 2014 | www.ReporterNewspapers.net

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Located just 17 miles south of Charlotte, Camp Thunderbirds’s 1.7-mile shoreline provides the ideal backdrop for life-changing summer experiences. Find out more about our nationally recognized water program or register online at www.campthunderbird.org. YMCA Mission: To put Christian principles into practice through programs that build healthy spirit, mind and body for all.

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FEB. 7 – FEB. 20, 2014 | 19


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FEB. 7 – FEB. 20, 2014 | www.ReporterNewspapers.net


Summer Camps

To advertise in the March 7 Camps section call 404-917-2200 x130.

Summer Horse Camps Chastain Horse Park - convenient Buckhead location! Mon-Fri 8:00-1:00 Camp includes daily riding lessons, crafts, and games! Lots of fun! Contact Margie at 404-252-4244 or ponychastain@aol.com Boarding * Riding Instruction * Therapeutic Riding Professional Clinics * Pony Parties * Camps

Pace Summer Programs offers a large variety of programs for campers of all ages! We welcome you to explore our web site where you will find many opportunities that promise to enrich your summer!

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Art • Chess • Cooking • Debate • Handwriting • Robotics • Theatre • Photography • Field Trips For a complete listing of programs, visit www.PaceCamp.com or call 404-240-9130 Pace Academy, 966 West Paces Ferry Road, Atlanta, GA 30327

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FEB. 7 – FEB. 20, 2014 | 21


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Senior Pastor Wiley Stephens outside the Dunwoody United Methodist Church sanctuary.

Two Dunwoody churches share same ‘core beliefs’ BY J.D. MOOR Dunwoody Baptist Church and church’s 50th anniversary in March. Dunwoody United Methodist Church “I hope nothing really distinguishstand together in the center of their es us from other churches. I hope that north DeKalb city. we’re all involved with each other,” DunNeighbors on opposite sides of woody United Methodist Senior Pastor Mount Vernon Road, they are hardWiley Stephens said. ly mirror images of Dunwoody Bapone another. Instead, tist has been part of they’re more like misChip Thompson’s life matched bookends since 1979. “We want to continue with one core value “We have incredto be relevant in this kept upright between ible leaders that conthem: nurturing the community while things are tinually prompt us community through ever changing. The gospel to trust God and spirited cooperation. make a difference doesn’t change, so it’s a “We’re here to in the community,” wonderful challenge.” minister to the comThompson said. “As munity, whether our pastor says so ap– MACK HANNAH you’re a member of propriately, ‘“We are SENIOR PASTOR the church or not,” just beggars trying to DUNWOODY BAPTIST CHURCH Dunwoody Baptist show other beggars Senior Pastor Mack where we found some Hannah said. bread.’” Both churches hold contemporary Providing food to the needy through and traditional Sunday services. The the Community Assistance Center is Methodist congregation is more than just one of the churches’ shared activi100 years old and claims some 4,600 ties. They also participate in Perimeter members. The Baptist congregation’s Adult Learning and Services, host Scout 1,500 members will celebrate their troops, and civic and cultural events,


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Senior Pastor Mack Hannah on the stage of Dunwoody Baptist Church’s Worship Center.

such as concerts or public meetings. Plus, the two pastors meet over breakfast periodically to compare notes. “We believe in the same basic faith. The core beliefs are the same,” Stephens said. A sampling of the two churches’ individual highlights includes Dunwoody Methodist’s long-term plans to build a new addition to its youth ministry, a new covered parking area, and to assemble a new organ, using vintage pipe materials. Later this year, the church hopes to launch a community initiative with six other churches that will help local senior citizens live independently in their own homes by providing transportation services and other programs. “Asking us what is special about DUMC would be like asking a goldfish what is special about water,” member Sid Linton said. Dunwoody Baptist’s extended family includes the 2,000 people who belong to its state-of-the-art fitness center, plus those who participate on athletic teams through its sports center and the many who take music, dance and voice lessons at its Dunwoody School for the Arts. They are open to the general public, as is a robust ESOL program. Church members, such as Jack Hamilton, also have access to a Men’s Fraternity, which he proudly said has changed his life. “We are learning how to be better men at home and better men in our workplace,” Hamilton said. “It has opened my eyes and been very beneficial with my relationship to my wife, my daughters, my sons.” The pastors agree that their biggest challenge is pacing themselves. “We want to continue to be relevant in this community while things are ever changing,” Hannah said. “The gospel doesn’t change, so it’s a wonderful challenge.” Hannah is into his 10th year as senior pastor. “I plan to be here as long as God wants me to,” he said. In 2015, Stephens will face manda-

tory retirement, according to Methodist rules. “It will leave a big hole in our community when he goes. He’s such a great man,” Hannah said. Stephens, who lives in Sandy Springs, says that after retirement, he doesn’t plan on going far. “I’ll always be in ministry,” he said, “but just as a volunteer.”

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FEB. 7 – FEB. 20, 2014 | 23


EDUCATION

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“Honey, they’re having fun over there!” Don’t be shy. See for yourself. Come on over. take a look around. Make yourself comfortable. Meet some residents. Join a conversation. Have some lunch (our treat, of course). What you’ll find is that the Renaissance on Peachtree is fun and energized. or is it energized and fun? Whatever the case may be, it certainly isn’t ordinary. so, don’t be shy, call (404) 237-2323 now to schedule your tour. Next thing you know, you’ll be saying, “Honey, we should’ve moved in years ago!”

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FEB. 7 – FEB. 20, 2014 | www.ReporterNewspapers.net

 Julianne Lang  The Galloway School, senior Julianne Lang long has had her heart set on theater. Ever since kindergarten, she has loved performing. In high school, she devoted herself to performing at Galloway, where she recently played one of her favorite roles, Prospero, the lead in Shakespeare’s Tempest. “It was the most challenging role I had ever done, being my first Shakespeare show, and playing a guy...it was a long process, but I felt like all of my hard work really paid off,” Julianne said. Another of Julianne’s favorite parts came in a comedy about two robots who fall in love. “I love comedy. It’s just fun - there’s something really wonderful about making people laugh,” said Julianne, who was also involved in a improvisational comedy troupe for four years. But theater is not the only activity in Julianne’s life. At one point, Julianne thought she wanted to be a lawyer, prompting her to join the mock trial team. “I originally got involved to be a witness, because it’s a way of performing and working on public speaking skills,” said Julianne. Eventually, she became an attorney and won an Outstanding Attorney Award at the regional mock trial competition the next two years. Julianne, who “absolutely loves musical theater,” enjoys singing. A member of Galloway’s chorus since freshman year, she’s taken voice lessons for five years and made all-state chorus for the past three years. Her interest in community service is demonstrated in her organization of two Breast Cancer Awareness walks with her best friend, collectively raising $6,000 for the cause. To top it off, Julianne serves as Galloway’s Student Body President, after being a member of Student Government (SGA) since freshmen year. Her ability to succeed in so many areas is unsurprising to her SGA advisor and history teacher, Felicia McCrary. “Julianne is not afraid of failure, and, because of that, she is bolder and sees things from such a unique perspective,” McCrary said. “There is joy in everything she does. I have been entertained by her abilities on the stage, inspired by her commitment to service, intrigued by her perspective as a student, impressed with her academic and artistic

gifts, amused by her sense of humor, engaged by her storytelling gifts, and overwhelmed that a student so wonderful has been in my life for four years.” Julianne claims that while it might seem counterintuitive, “the fact that I have such a busy schedule helps me be more productive,” and her devotion to Galloway shines through - enough that wearing the school’s stinky mascot costume hasn’t bothered her for the past four years. While Julianne’s life is filled to the brim, her passion for theater still emerges. “If I could, I would live eight million lives to do everything,” she said. The solution to her endless interests is theater, where “you get the chance to live so many lives, dabble in everything, by playing characters.” Julianne used her summers to explore performance, first participating in a program at the renowned North Carolina School of the Arts, and the following summer, at the Cherubs program at Northwestern, a five-week theater intensive. “We would wake up at 6 a.m. and stay up to 10:30 p.m. doing everything,” said Julianne. “While I’ve always been pretty sure that theater is what I want to get into, the hard work that went into everything we did really solidified in my mind that this is exactly what I want to be doing.” What she loves most about theater is the family atmosphere it fosters. “It’s the community that happens in every show - whether you’re Hamlet or the guy helping with quick changes, you’re all working together...it’s about creating a story together,” said Julianne.

What’s Next:

Julianne plans on pursuing theater at Northwestern University. Elizabeth Wilkes, a senior at North Springs Charter High, prepared this article.

Do you know a standout high school student? Send nominees to editor@reporternewspapers.net.

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EDUCATION Student Profile:  Austin Sprague  St. Pius X Catholic High School, senior

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In middle school, Austin Sprague decided to try running. His parents are runners and, like his brother, he must have inherited the running gene. In Austin’s freshman year, he beat his brother’s school record. Since then, Austin has focused on running cross-country and track. This past summer, he ran more than 700 miles. The work paid off. Austin was named the 2013-2014 Gatorade Georgia Boys’ Cross Country Runner of the Year, which honors the state’s top athlete in the sport, St. Pius X Catholic High announced in January. Winning the Georgia title puts his name in a hat for the national title. “That is a lot harder to achieve, because I am going against the top 50 in the nation,” he said. Last year, Austin raced to his second consecutive AAA individual state championship, pacing the St. Pius X boys’ team to its fourth consecutive AAA state crown, the school said in a press release. Austin also was named co-Runner of the Year by the Atlanta Track Club after a season which saw him finish fourth in the Nike Cross Nationals Southeast Regional. He placed 32nd at the NXN Final national race and has finished in the top 30 at both the 2011 and 2012 Foot Locker South Regional Championships. “Austin is a very dedicated athlete, and despite making some sacrifices early, we were able to still help him accomplish his goals, so the season definitely ended on a high note,” said St. Pius X’s head boys’ cross-country coach, Ryan McClay. “He has four individual state titles, and five team state titles in crosscountry and track and field. He’s looking to get three more this spring. He also has the rare accomplishment of placing in the top 10 at state all four years of high school.” McClay called Austin “the fiercest competitor that I’ve ever coached.”

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“He’s a very talented athlete, obviously, but his work ethic is second to none,” McClay said. “He does everything right, and takes care of himself in every way. I’m so proud to have coached him and will miss him as an athlete.” After cross-country season is over, Austin usually takes 1 or 2 weeks off and then moves into training for track season. “I do both indoor and outdoor track and field,” he said, “but while the weather is cold, it is nicer to race indoors.” His first race is in Kentucky on Feb. 22, where he hopes to qualify for the indoor track nationals in New York City. When Austin is not running crosscountry or track, he spends his time working at a program for kids with occupational therapy needs. “During the summer I work with kids and do different activities, like bowling and laser tag.” He discovered the program through a former gym teacher. “He invited me out to one of the hikes, then invited me to one of the summer camps,” Austin said. “Ever since then, I have fallen in love with it.”

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Sticks ready! Riverwood International Charter School boys’ varsity lacrosse team held practice on Feb. 1. Above, Duncan Jackson, right, passes to Ryan Horn, left, during a midfielder’s drill.

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FEB. 7 – FEB. 20, 2014 | www.ReporterNewspapers.net

tion,” society President Kate Dalba said. “What we’re concerned about is wording that would exclude nonprofits like us from applying for direct grants for community events.” City officials are rethinking the city’s policy on grants to nonprofits in an effort to get better control over how the money is spent. Proposed changes in the city’s policy would limit donations to organizations that provide programs. The Sandy Springs Society raises money to donate to other groups, but operates two large community events as fundraisers. “It has to be something that is programmatic,” Mayor Rusty Paul said. “There’s a reason for that: We have to maintain a connection to the money. These monies have to be segregated so they can be accounted for. We have to make sure the money goes to a particular program.” The city now provides $422,500 in direct appropriations to a variety of nonprofit groups ranging from $127,500 to Sandy Springs Youth Sports for maintenance and program support to $5,000 to the Sandy Springs/Perimeter Chamber of Commerce for dues and support of special events, according to the city. The city also budgets $50,000 that

local nonprofits compete for. Those grants ranged from $10,000 for Act3 Productions to $2,500 for Senior Services North Fulton for a new kiln, city officials reported. Paul has said the city does not require the same financial reporting from all nonprofit groups receiving grants from the city. Members of the society say their nonprofit organization – which Paul described as including hundreds of “the most powerful women in Sandy Springs” – has provided more than $2.56 million in grants since it was created in 1988. “For 25 years, we have been part of the landscape of this city, both literally and figuratively,” former President Valerie Love told council members. Love said the organization wanted the city to include language in its new policy “that would allow us to come to the table” when grants are awarded. Council member Andy Bauman said the city’s policy should encourage more events. “We need to have more of these events, not less,” Bauman said. “My bent here is to be more open and not find ways we can’t do it. You go to these events and see ‘Sponsored by the Roswell Arts Commission.’ I want that for our city.” SS


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The following incidents and arrests are some but not all of the reports filed with SSPD over the listed period, dated through Jan. 24. The following information was provided by the Sandy Springs Police Department from its records and is presumed to be accurate.

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 1000 block of Dunroven Farm Road 30342 – On Jan. 20, a man reported that in the early evening, he was robbed in his driveway by a man, who then left in a white or cream Ford Fusion, south on Peachtree Dunwoody Road. The victim said he returned home from the Ashford Dunwoody Road area and thinks that the suspect followed him from Lynwood Park. The man lives in a small, gated community and noticed the suspect’s car “raced” past the gate before it could close after the victim entered. The man said others have done this before so it did not raise his suspicion at the time. The suspect approached the victim, who at first thought this was a joke having to do with his son, but realized he was being robbed when the suspect produced a gun. The victim handed over a laptop bag containing a 13-inch MacBook.  Glenridge Drive 30342 – On Jan. 22, a man said he was at a gas station in the 8200 block of Roswell Road, looking for work. He was picked up by a man in a Nissan Pathfinder. He told the victim to get in, which he did, thinking he was going to a work site. The man drove to Glenridge near Colton Drive and pulled a gun on the victim, taking his Mexican ID and $5. He told him to get out and then drove off.

BURGLA RY  300 block of Winding River Drive 30350 – On Jan. 19, someone entered the apartment through a window and took a Sony TV, $150 in coins, and a rifle that did not work.  8100 block of Colquitt Road 30350 – On Jan. 20, someone forced a sliding door open and entered the victim’s apartment. The victim said he allowed an acquaintance to stay there but had recently told the person to leave. He may be a suspect. Nothing was listed as missing.  5500 block of Lake Forrest Drive 30328 – On Jan. 23, the complainant said someone forced entry and took a 46-inch Sony TV, decanter cabinet and cigar humidor.  7700 block of Roswell Road 30350 – On Jan. 23, someone forced entry to a storage locker and stole the contents.

THEF T  8000 block of Colquitt Road 30350 – On Jan. 18, a woman reported that her roommate has a boyfriend who, with his friends, came over and began smoking weed from a pipe and bong. Later, she found that her credit union debit card was stolen.  400 block of Wedgewood Way 30350 – On Jan. 19, a car was stolen in the driveway while it was warming up.  4900 block of Roswell Road 30342 – On Jan. 20, the manager said a man came into

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the store and took several cleaning supplies and then left without paying for them. He left in silver BMW. The tag was obtained and the theft is being investigated.  Riversedge Drive 30328 – On Jan. 20, a woman reported a bronze sculpture, weighing 100 pounds, was stolen after it was delivered to the complex. Another person in the complex signed for the sculpture, but said he left it at the door since door entry had to include a code.  6900 block of Roswell Road 30328 – On Jan. 20, a man reported that while he was at work, his disgruntled girlfriend left and took some of his “stuff” from his condo.

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 Two men filled a grocery cart with beer and then tried to flee a grocery store on Abernathy Road. The staff noticed the attempt and pursued. The men abandoned the cart and fled in a black SUV.  On Jan. 23, at about 8:30 p.m., a man re-

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AS S AULT  5600 block of Roswell Road 30342 – On Jan. 18, a man reported that while he was working at his store, another man he knows who works for the company that empties the store’s dumpster, came in and began talking to him in a sexually provocative way, which made him nervous. Minutes later, the clerk was outside near the dumpster when the same man came up to him, struck him in the face, and then fondled himself before returning to his vehicle and driving off.  On Jan. 22 – A woman reported that she received a total of three calls from her boyfriend’s ex-wife who said she was going to have her ex-husband killed and he would be dead when she got home. She called him at their residence in Paulding County and warned him. CONTINUED ON PAGE 28

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FEB. 7 – FEB. 20, 2014 | 27


PUBLIC SAFETY

Sandy Springs Police Blotter CONTINUED FROM PAGE 27  6900 block of Roswell Road 30328 – On Jan. 22, a woman reported that around 11:30 p.m. she and her boyfriend of two years, who live together, began arguing in bed. She punched him and he threw a bottle of cologne against the wall. She retaliated by going to the closet and throwing all of the clothing out. The boyfriend retaliated by throwing her iPad against the wall, breaking it. Her boyfriend then picked her up and removed her from the bedroom, causing the door frame to be damaged. She then took her iPhone and began taking photos of the damage. He grabbed the phone and after a brief struggle, threw it in the parking lot, damaging it. He left before the police arrived.  Cedar Run – A woman reported that on Jan. 23 she and her boyfriend got into an argument over who would clean up the dog poop on the floor. Later, in bed, her boyfriend came in and took all the covers. When she pulled back, he head-butted her, causing a cut on her lip. The man then ran off.

ARRES TS  Spring Creek Lane – Cops arrested a man on Jan. 18 at after he hit his wife during an argument. The argument began when she complained to him that he was drinking and playing video games when he had to be at work a short time later. The man was arrested on domestic violence charges.  900 block of Jefferson Drive 30350 – On Jan. 18, a man reported that his wife assault-

ed him after he had been out at a bar with his sister. They argued, and he went to the bedroom to pack his belongings. She followed him and hit him in the face. She was later arrested.  4700 block of Northside Drive 30342 – On Jan. 18, responding to

a loud-party call, officers found more than 50 cars parked along the road. They found multiple teenagers running in the adjacent neighborhoods, and even more when the “cops” alarm went out. Officers said some of the fleeing teens were without clothing. Some were unable to walk and were being assisted, and in some cases, carried by friends. Multiple citations were made and kids turned over to parents. The resident of the home, a 17-yearold female, was arrested and taken to jail.  6300 block of Powers Ferry Road 30342 – On Jan. 18, at around 1:30 a.m., officers were called to a fast-food restaurant on Powers Ferry Road on a report of a man trying to smash the front windows of the store. The business was closed, and the man fled when he saw the manager calling the police. The man fled to the Wyndham Hotel next door, went upstairs to one of the hallways, pulled a fire extinguisher off the wall and sprayed the contents to such an extent that the hall filled with a white fog. The cops found the guy passed out on the hallway floor. He eventually came back to consciousness as they were putting him in an ambulance to have

him checked. He began to fight with the EMS personnel who called for the cops to help. The cops secured the man, and after he refused to be medically seen, took him to jail. The officer noted the man used several racial slurs and referred to the officer as a “pig,” which, as we know, was retired as an insult in the early 1980s. The man banged his head against whatever he could find, but was eventually successfully incarcerated.  6300 block of Roswell Road 30328 – On Jan. 20, around 4:30 a.m., police were called to a pharmacy in reference to a disorderly man. The man, according to the staff, jumped over the counter of the pharmacy and made threats to the staff. He was confronted by the officers who noted he was drinking. He told the cops he was at a nightclub and came into the pharmacy to get warm while waiting on a ride. The staff said the man made several references to shooting them and referred to them using racial slurs. The man had a substance on him that resembled MDMA (“Molly”) and said he had “smoked some weed and had some beers.” He told the officers that he was from up north, and the staff was scared of him because of the way he dressed. (The fact that he threatened to shoot them may have played a part as well.) He was taken to jail.  New Northside Drive – Cops were called to a bank regarding a check forgery in progress. A man was positively ID’d by the bank staff. He later told the officer someone he

didn’t know had asked him to cash a check for $1,350, and said he would give him $100 for doing so. That “unknown” man was not located. The suspect was arrested on forgery charges.  5500 block of Northside Drive 30342 – On Jan. 2,2 two men were arrested at a bank after they attempted to deposit fake checks into an account that was known to be used for “phishing.” (The last name on the bank account was “Fish.”) The checks, totaling about $415, were on a Best Bank account and had fake account numbers. Both men were arrested and taken to jail.

OTHER THINGS  A woman reported that she was intro-

duced to a man by an acquaintance; not in person but via text. Soon the man asked her to send him nude photos of her. She changed her phone, but her acquaintance gave the new number to the man, who again requested the photos.

 A woman has been receiving text messages

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 A man reported that he let an employee

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FEB. 7 – FEB. 20, 2014 | www.ReporterNewspapers.net

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PUBLIC SAFETY

Dunwoody wants report on emergency dispatch delay BY JOE EARLE

joeearle@reporternewspapers.net

Dunwoody City Council members are asking for a report on the handling of a Jan. 8 emergency call made by a 79-yearold woman. Former City Councilman Danny Ross played a tape recording of the call during the Jan. 27 council meeting which showed the woman was placed on hold during the transfer of the call from Chatcomm to DeKalb County dispatchers. Ross said it took about five minutes for the woman to be connected to an emergency medical and fire services dispatcher. Dunwoody’s 911 calls are handled by Chatcomm, and fire and medical services are handled by DeKalb County and dispatched by DeKalb County dispatchers. Ross has said that the transfer of fire and medical calls from one agency to another should be handled by a computer-assisted dispatch system, or CAD, rather than the single-button transfer now used. But Dunwoody has been unsuccessful in efforts to convince Chatcomm and DeKalb to connect with a CAD-to-CAD system and get the system operating. City officials now say the system should “go live” by the end of February.

Councilman John Heneghan asked city staff members to report to council why a police car was not dispatched to aid the woman before the call was transferred from Chatcomm to DeKalb County dispatchers. Henghan said he was “livid” police were not sent to what appeared to be a medical emergency. “What we heard tonight was troubling...,” he said. Meanwhile, Chatcomm is offering Dunwoody a chance to purchase a membership in the authority over the next five years. Dunwoody is a customer of the authority, which is owned by the cities of Sandy Springs and Johns Creek. On Jan. 24, Dunwoody City Manager Warren Hutmacher gave members of City Council copies of a letter from Chatcomm chairman Wendell Willard that said Dunwoody could continue its current relationship with Chatcomm for $1.075 million a year for five years, its current compensation, or pay that amount plus an additional $1.75 million over five years, paid at a rate of $350,000 a year, to purchase a share in Chatcomm equal to 1/3 of the value of its capital investment.

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COMMUNITY

Pink Pony offers $200,000 a year to settle lawsuit BY MELISSA WEINMAN

melissaweinman@reporternewspapers.net

Representatives for the Pink Pony strip club say they have offered to pay the city of Brookhaven $200,000 a year in licensing fees to settle their ongoing lawsuit, but city officials haven’t accepted it. That amount, offered for an undisclosed long-term period, doubles the amount the club has paid DeKalb County in fees each year, said Dennis Williams, chief financial officer of Trop Inc., the corporation that owns the club. “We never really got a yes or no,” Williams said. “They said they’d take it under consideration.” Brookhaven City Manager Marie Garrett declined to discuss the offer. “We cannot comment on that. It’s pending litigation,” Garrett said. In May, the owners of the strip club sued the city after Brookhaven City Council approved a sexually-oriented business ordinance that would ban nude dancing with the sale of alcohol. In December, a DeKalb County judge dismissed the lawsuit, and the club appealed the decision shortly after. The case is now awaiting a hearing in Georgia Supreme Court. Meanwhile, Brookhaven officials denied the Pony’s application for a 2014 li-

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quor license, a decision that was upheld recently by the city’s Alcohol Board. At the board’s first meeting Jan. 27, the four members present took a split vote, with two siding with the city and two with the club. A majority of the five-member board would have been needed to overturn the city’s administrative denial. Enforcement is now at the city’s discretion. “We still have a valid state license and we will still operate legally until the Supreme Court or someone else affirms or reverses the DeKalb judge’s decision,” said Aubrey Villines, an attorney for the Pink Pony, referencing the lawsuit between the club and the city. The issue with the Pony’s license revolves in part around the 2012 death of its late owner, Jack Galardi. Scott Bergthold, the lawyer who was brought in to draft the city’s sexuallyoriented business ordinance, said the Georgia Department of Revenue, which issues state licenses, requires that the license holder be actively engaged in the business. Also, in order for the state license to be valid, the business must also hold a valid county or municipal license.

FEB. 7 – FEB. 20, 2014 | www.ReporterNewspapers.net

Dennis Williams, CFO of Trop Inc., which owns the club.

Bergthold said because Jack Galardi is no longer involved with the business,“they had a duty to notify the state of that.” “Pink Pony does not have corresponding, valid city of Brookhaven alcoholic beverage license. They’ve never had one,” Bergthold said. “They have to have a local license for the state license to be valid.” At the state level, the club is licensed using its corporate name, Trop Inc. Villines said that shouldn’t be an issue at all. Many businesses register under a corporate name to obtain a state liquor license, he said. “Therein lies the rub. You’ve got a city that licenses the person and a state that licenses the corporation,” Villines said. “We’re licensed as Trop Inc. not Jack Galardi, not [his daughter] Teri Galardi,

not JEG Family Trust.” Williams said the state Department of Revenue has verbally been informed of Galardi’s death. However, the ownership of Trop Inc. is also being decided in court, so formal documents will not be submitted to the department until it is resolved, he said. Villines said along with the club’s application for a Brookhaven license, he sent a letter to the city explaining Galardi’s death and asking for further instructions. “We explained and basically asked for direction. There was no deception here,” Villines said. “The only thing inconsistent is we’re not getting a license.” During an interview in his office at Galardi South Enterprises, Williams said the employees of the Pink Pony are concerned about what will happen to the club. “I get asked all the time, how are we doing? Are we going to lose our liquor license?” Williams said. “We lose sleep at night. We’d like to get this behind us.” But Mike Kap, chief operating officer for the Pink Pony’s parent company Galardi South Enterprises, said he doesn’t believe the city will negotiate. “I don’t think there’s anything we could offer them that they would accept,” Kap said.

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