CrossRoadsNews, Aug. 4, 2012

12
CrossRoadsNews publisher and general manager Jennifer and Curtis Parker (center) and staff pose with Pioneer Journalists awards. Please see T-SPLOST, page 5 Please see AABJ, page 3 Oakhurst Medical Centers marks National Health Center Week by breaking ground for its new complex in DeKalb. 7 Health care observance WELLNESS The Burundi Drummers will help Clarkston celebrate the grand opening of renovated Milam Park and National Night Out. 9 Clarkston block party SCENE DEKALB, REGION REJECT T-SPLOST Proponents, foes vow to head back to table to craft viable transportation plan Photos by Curtis Parker / CrossRoadsNews At left, District 3 Commissioner Larry Johnson, state Rep. Howard Mosby and School Board member Jay Cunningham celebrate the defeat of T-SPLOST while watching returns at Java Delight in South DeKalb. Above, DeKalb NAACP President John Evans (left) confers with state Sen. Vincent Fort at Manuel’s Tavern in East Atlanta while awaiting results of vote on election night. CrossRoadsNews wins seven awards for outstanding journalism EAST ATLANTA • DECATUR • STONE MOUNTAIN • LITHONIA • AVONDALE ESTATES • CLARKSTON • ELLENWOOD • PINE LAKE • REDAN • SCOTTDALE • TUCKER www.crossroadsnews.com August 4, 2012 VOLUME 18, NUMBER 14 COPYRIGHT © 2012 CROSSROADSNEWS, INC. By Jennifer Ffrench Parker The controversial penny sales tax for the transportation referendum went down like a ton of bricks on July 31. Metro Atlantans voted 62.7 percent to 37.3 percent to defeat the Transportation Special Purpose Local Options Sales Tax. Region wide, more than 416,230 people voted no. The yes votes numbered 247,970 in the 10-county Atlanta area. DeKalb voters narrowly defeated the measure with 51.3 percent, or 64,689, voting no to 61,374, or 48.7 percent, voting yes. An analysis of the voting shows that pre- cincts in Central and North DeKalb voted in higher percentages against the T-SPLOST. Statewide, most T-SPLOST referendums, which would raise $19 billion if approved district by district, met wide margins of de- feat. Only three of 12 districts approved it. Opponents hailed Atlanta’s landslide no vote as a clear message that voters are tired of taxes and of being left out of the process. They said the vote offers an opportunity for the region to return to the table to craft a solid transportation plan that can fix the region’s traffic problems with a fair and sen- sible mix of rail and road projects. DeKalb NAACP President John Evans, who fought the plan from the start, said the people spoke loud and clear. “People want to be part of a real plan for the betterment of the region,” he said. “What kind of system are we going to have? How much rail? MARTA ought to be the hub of anything we do. We need to get input from everyone, not just elected officials and the fat cats. And when you have the right stuff, you can think about how you are going to pay for it.” Atlanta Mayor Kasim Reed, who fought for passage of the referendum, was visibly disappointed when he addressed supporters election night. He said he is not giving up. “The voters have decided,” he said. “But tomorrow I am going to get up and work just as hard to change their minds.” Reed and Sam Williams, president of the Metro Atlanta Chamber of Commerce, thanked the business community, which con- tributed $8 million for an aggressive media campaign to pass the referendum. Williams said that coalition was a first for the region and that it would look to the future. District 3 Commissioner Larry Johnson, who along with District 5 Commissioner Lee May were in the forefront of DeKalb’s opposition to the plan , said the large no vote means that we must return to the table. “We have to go back and start over,” he said. “We have to do it the right way. When we were telling them that it wasn’t right, they wouldn’t listen. We just have to go back to the table and work it out.” Johnson said that South DeKalb needs rail and that any new plan must include rail for the area that has supported MARTA for 40 years. with its own penny sales tax. May said the referen- dum failed because voters did not see projects on the list that were worth the additional tax burden. “Today, working families need rail more than ever to reduce their transportation costs and a MARTA rail line extended to South and Central DeKalb should be a part of that Lee May CrossRoadsNews was the big winner at the Atlanta Association of Black Journalists’ 30th Pioneer Black Journalist Awards on July 29. The weekly DeKalb newspaper swept the competition for print media with circulation of up to 100,000. It won all seven categories that it entered, and two of its reporters – Jennifer Ffrench Parker and Donna Lewis – tied in the Soft Feature category. Jennifer Parker, the editor and publisher, said the awards demonstrated that even small newspapers can do good journalism. Each week, the community newspaper, which has a full-time staff of only five and a circulation of 28,000, breaks news and pro- duces original stories about DeKalb institu- tions and people. The AABJ journalism awards come in the wake of the newspaper’s winning the Miller Coors Messenger Award in June at the National Newspaper Publishers Association Summer Conference for its story “Cell Tow- ers Going to Schools.” That win included a $5,000 check for writer Ffrench Parker. The AABJ entries were judged by the Houston Association of Black Journalists. In the Community/Public Affairs cat- egory, “Plethora of Tires Spurs Kayaker to Action,” a story written by Ffrench Parker about kayaker Richard Grove’s efforts to clean up the South River, was the winner. That story also won the Photojournalism award for photographer Curtis Parker. In the Deadline Reporting category, the newspaper’s story “I Thought I Was Going to Die” about Erin Ingram’s testimony in the

description

CrossRoadsNews, Aug. 4, 2012

Transcript of CrossRoadsNews, Aug. 4, 2012

Page 1: CrossRoadsNews, Aug. 4, 2012

COVER PAGE

CrossRoadsNews publisher and general manager Jennifer and Curtis Parker (center) and staff pose with Pioneer Journalists awards.

Please see T-SPLOST, page 5

Please see AABJ, page 3

Oakhurst Medical Centers marks National Health Center Week by breaking ground for its new complex in DeKalb. 7

Health care observanceWELLNESS

The Burundi Drummers will help Clarkston celebrate the grand opening of renovated Milam Park and National Night Out. 9

Clarkston block partySCENE

DeKalb, Region Reject t-SPloSt

Proponents, foes vow to head back to table to craft viable transportation plan

Photos by Curtis Parker / CrossRoadsNewsAt left, District 3 Commissioner Larry Johnson, state Rep. Howard Mosby and School Board member Jay Cunningham celebrate the defeat of T-SPLOST while watching returns at Java Delight in South DeKalb. Above, DeKalb NAACP President John Evans (left) confers with state Sen. Vincent Fort at Manuel’s Tavern in East Atlanta while awaiting results of vote on election night.

CrossRoadsNews wins seven awards for outstanding journalism

EAST ATLANTA • DECATUR • STONE MOUNTAIN • LITHONIA • AVONDALE ESTATES • CLARKSTON • ELLENWOOD • PINE LAKE • REDAN • SCOTTDALE • TUCKER

www.crossroadsnews.comAugust 4, 2012 Volume 18, Number 14Copyright © 2012 CrossroadsNews, iNC.

By Jennifer Ffrench Parker

The controversial penny sales tax for the transportation referendum went down like a ton of bricks on July 31.

Metro Atlantans voted 62.7 percent to 37.3 percent to defeat the Transportation Special Purpose Local Options Sales Tax.

Region wide, more than 416,230 people voted no. The yes votes numbered 247,970 in the 10-county Atlanta area.

DeKalb voters narrowly defeated the measure with 51.3 percent, or 64,689, voting no to 61,374, or 48.7 percent, voting yes.

An analysis of the voting shows that pre-cincts in Central and North DeKalb voted in higher percentages against the T-SPLOST.

Statewide, most T-SPLOST referendums, which would raise $19 billion if approved district by district, met wide margins of de-feat. Only three of 12 districts approved it.

Opponents hailed Atlanta’s landslide no vote as a clear message that voters are tired of taxes and of being left out of the process.

They said the vote offers an opportunity for the region to return to the table to craft a solid transportation plan that can fix the region’s traffic problems with a fair and sen-sible mix of rail and road projects.

DeKalb NAACP President John Evans, who fought the plan from the start, said the people spoke loud and clear.

“People want to be part of a real plan for the betterment of the region,” he said. “What kind of system are we going to have? How much rail? MARTA ought to be the hub of anything we do. We need to get input from everyone, not just elected officials and the fat cats. And when you have the right stuff, you can think about how you are going to pay for it.”

Atlanta Mayor Kasim Reed, who fought

for passage of the referendum, was visibly disappointed when he addressed supporters election night. He said he is not giving up.

“The voters have decided,” he said. “But tomorrow I am going to get up and work just as hard to change their minds.”

Reed and Sam Williams, president of the Metro Atlanta Chamber of Commerce, thanked the business community, which con-tributed $8 million for an aggressive media campaign to pass the referendum.

Williams said that coalition was a first for the region and that it would look to the future.

District 3 Commissioner Larry Johnson, who along with District 5 Commissioner Lee May were in the forefront of DeKalb’s opposition to the plan , said the large no vote means that we must return to the table.

“We have to go back and start over,” he said. “We have to do it the right way. When

we were telling them that it wasn’t right, they wouldn’t listen. We just have to go back to the table and work it out.”

Johnson said that South DeKalb needs rail and that any new plan must include rail for the area that has supported MARTA for 40 years. with its own penny sales tax.

May said the referen-dum failed because voters did not see projects on the list that were worth the additional tax burden.

“Today, working families need rail more than ever to reduce their transportation costs and a MARTA rail line extended to South and Central DeKalb should be a part of that

Lee May

CrossRoadsNews was the big winner at the Atlanta Association of Black Journalists’ 30th Pioneer Black Journalist Awards on July 29.

The weekly DeKalb newspaper swept the competition for print media with circulation of up to 100,000.

It won all seven categories that it entered, and two of its reporters – Jennifer Ffrench Parker and Donna Lewis – tied in the Soft Feature category.

Jennifer Parker, the editor and publisher, said the awards demonstrated that even small newspapers can do good journalism.

Each week, the community newspaper,

which has a full-time staff of only five and a circulation of 28,000, breaks news and pro-duces original stories about DeKalb institu-tions and people.

The AABJ journalism awards come in

the wake of the newspaper’s winning the Miller Coors Messenger Award in June at the National Newspaper Publishers Association Summer Conference for its story “Cell Tow-ers Going to Schools.” That win included a

$5,000 check for writer Ffrench Parker.The AABJ entries were judged by the

Houston Association of Black Journalists.In the Community/Public Affairs cat-

egory, “Plethora of Tires Spurs Kayaker to Action,” a story written by Ffrench Parker about kayaker Richard Grove’s efforts to clean up the South River, was the winner. That story also won the Photojournalism award for photographer Curtis Parker.

In the Deadline Reporting category, the newspaper’s story “I Thought I Was Going to Die” about Erin Ingram’s testimony in the

Page 2: CrossRoadsNews, Aug. 4, 2012

2 Community In DeKalb, 127,144 of the county’s 405,103 registered voters cast ballots. Of these, 20,234 were cast by early voters.

Incumbents in local, state and congressional races stay put

DeKalb turnout at 31.4 percent; 127,144 votes castHere are results from contested races in

the July 31 primary, and the referendums on T-SPLOST and placing cell phone towers on school properties.

The voter turnout was 31.4 percent with 127,144 or DeKalb’s 4-5,103 registered voters casting ballots.

(D)= Democratic (R)= Republican (I)= Incumbent

DeKalb boarD of eDucation

(Nonpartisan) Salary: $18,000

District 2Don McChesney (I) 4,941 38.2%Marshall Orson 7,980 61.7%

District 4Tom Gilbe208413.73Jim Kinney 1708 11.3%Jim McMahan 4195 27.7%H. Paul Womack Jr. (I) 7139 47.1%

District 6Melvin Johnson 5,145 39.7%Denise E. McGill 3,900 30.1%Terriyln C. Rivers-Cannon 1,281 9.9%Latasha Walker 2,596 20.02%

District 8Michelle “Mimi” Clark 22,441 48.00%Pamela Speaks (I) 24,191 51.74%

DeKalb boarD of commissioners Salary: $38,374.51

District 1Elaine Boyer (I) 10,879 76.53%Larry Danese (R) 3,337 23.5%

District 4Steve Bradshaw (D) 3,360 22.7%Clyburn Halley (D) 612 4.13%Sharon Barnes Sutton (I)(D) 10,849 73.20%

District 5Gina Mangham (D) 2,482 12.7%Lee May (I)(D) 13,305 67.8%Kenneth L. Samuel (D) 2,601 13.3%Andre R. White (D) 1,238 6.31%

District 6Kathie Gannon (I)(D) 24,639 75.1%Edmond Richardson (D) 8,176 24.92%

DeKalb county ceoSalary: $116,749.57 Gregory Adams (D) 16,279 20.5%Jerome Edmondson (D) 15,231 19.2% Burrell Ellis (I)(D) 48,000 60.4%

tax commissioner

Salary: $109,425.84Claudia G. Lawson (I)(D) 65,730 85.53%Melvin Allen Tukes (D) 11,116 14.5%

clerK of superior court

Salary: $109,425.84John Q. Carter (D) 9,210 12.5%Debra DeBerry (I)(D) 44,954 60.8%Oretha Brown-Johnson (D) 9,945 13.5%Frank L. Swindle (D) 4,221 5.71%Cheryl D. Vortice (D) 5,632 7.61%

state court JuDge

(Nonpartisan)Salary: $116,749.57

Division 6 Dax E. Lopez (I) 58,215 56.98%Dionne McGee 43,856 42.92%

u.s. House of representatives

District 4Salary: $174,000

Precincts Reporting:Courtney L. Dillard Sr. (D) 13,118 19.08%“Hank” Johnson Jr. (I)(D) 52,903 76.96% Lincoln Nunnally (D) 2,724 3.96% Greg Pallen (R) 3,127 46.88% J. Chris Vaughn (R) 17,252 54.48%

District 5Michael Johnson (D) 15,989 19.36% John Lewis (I)(D) 66,611 80.64%

District 6Jeff Kazanow (D) 10,123 51.12% Robert Montigel (D) 9,687 48.88%

georgia House Salary: $17,700

District 80 Precincts Reporting:

Mike Jacobs (I)(R) 4,902 100%Sandy Murray (D) 2,548 100%

District 81Chris Boedeker (R) 2,534 70.60%Carla Roberts (R) 1,055 29.40% Scott Holcomb (I)(D) 2,262 100%

District 90Scott Hughes (D) 1,593 20.88%Pam S. Stephenson (I)(D) 6,035 79.12%

District 92Tonya Anderson (D) 1,105 24.62%Doreen Carter (D) 887 19.76%Kathy L. Harvey (D) 405 9.02%Sherri Len Washington (D) 1,016 22.64%Doreen Williams (D) 1,075 23.95%

District 93Christine “Tina” Hoffer (R) 1,838 100%Dexter Dawston (D) 527 10.22%Dar’shun N. Kendrick (I)(D) 3,121 60.52%Glen Williams (D) 1,509 29.26%

District 94Karen Bennett (D) 3,420 62.60%Patricia Bourdeau (D) 755 13.82%Tony Lentini (D) 525 9.61% Jaye Lynn Peabody (D) 763 13.97%

georgia senate Salary: $17,700

District 44Gail Buckner (D) 10,451 42.31% Gail P. Davenport (I)(D) 11,968 48.45%Marcus E. Davis (D) 2,284 9.25%

District 55Gloria Butler (I)(D) 13,332 78.87% Mark Williams (D) 3,572 21.13%

superior court JuDge

Stone Mountain Circuit (Flake)Salary: $120,552 Gail C. Flake (I) 71,057 72.08%Michael Rothenberg, 27,388 27.78%

public service commissioner

Salary: $116,452Chuck Eaton (I)(R) 502,974 59.90%Matt Reid (R) 336,710 40.10% Pam Davidson (R) 360,146 43.5%Stan Wise (R) 468,016 56.51%

special elections

Referendum 1: Atlanta Regional District T-SPLOSTProvides for local transportation projects to create jobs and reduce traffic congestion with citizen oversight.Question: “Shall DeKalb County’s transportation system and the transportation network in this region and the state be improved by providing for a 1 percent special district transportation sales and use tax for the purpose of transportation projects and programs for a period of ten years?” Yes 61,374 48.69% No 64,689 51.31%

Non-binding Advisory Referendum“Should the local or independent school system of DeKalb County or a charter school in DeKalb County place or operate a telecommunications tower on any elementary, middle, or high school property?” Yes 45,696 37.84% No 75,073 62.16%

City of Brookhaven Incorporation“Shall the Act incorporating the City of Brookhaven in DeKalb County according to the charter contained in the Act and the homestead exemptions described in the Act be approved?” Yes 5,939 54.7% No 4,928 45.4%

Democratic Questionsn Should the Georgia Constitution be amended to allow the state to override locally-elected school boards’ decisions when it comes to the creation of charter schools in your county or city? Yes 35,543 42.60% No 47,890 57.40%n Do you support ending current practice permitting unlimited gifts from lobbyists to state legislators? Yes 66,287 77.62% No 19,111 22.4%n Should Georgia adopt an income tax credit for home energy costs to support the economic security of our families? Yes 67,897 80.7% No 16,251 19.31%n Should Georgia reduce sales taxes on Made in Georgia products so as to support the growth of small businesses in our state? Yes 72,893 85.63% No 12,234 14.4%Republican Questionsn Should Georgia have casino gambling with funds going to education? Yes 15,534 51.3% No 14,757 48.72%n Do you support ending the current practice of unlimited gifts from lobbyists to state legislators by imposing a $100 cap on such gifts? Yes 26,632 88.51% No 3,458 11.49%n Should active duty military personnel who are under the age of 21 be allowed to obtain a Georgia weapons license? Yes 19,391 65.00% No 10,454 35.03%n Should citizens who wish to vote in a primary election be required to register by their political party affiliation at least thirty (30) days prior to such primary election? Yes 11,247 37.8% No 18,536 62.24%n Should the Constitution of Georgia be amended so as to provide that the paramount right to life is vested in each innocent human being from his or her earliest biological beginning without regard to age, race, sex, health, function, or condition of dependency? Yes 14,794 51.3% No 14,068 48.74%

Sources: DeKalb County Board of Elections and the Georgia Secretary of State, Georgia Legislative and Congressional

By Jennifer Ffrench Parker

Incumbents had a good day on July 31.From local to congressional races, the

incumbents won with large margins during the July 31 general primary and non-partisan races.

In DeKalb, 127,144 of the county’s 405,103 registered voters cast ballots. Of these, 20,234 were cast by early voters be-tween July 9 aand 27.

DeKalb’s voter turnout was 31.4 percent.Statewide, the turnout was 31.2 percent with 1.6 million of Georgia’s 5.2 million registered voters casting ballots.

DeKalb Commissioners Sharon Barnes Sutton, Lee May, Kathie Gannon and Elaine Boyer beat back opposition to retain their seats.

In the Georgia House, Reps. Pam Ste-phenson and Dar’shun Kendrick retained their seats as did state Sen. Gloria Butler.

The only incumbents in runoffs are Sen-

ate District 44 incumbent Gail Davenport and School Board District 4 member Paul Womack.

Davenport will face challenger Gail Buck-ner, and Womack will face Jim McMahan in runoffs on Aug. 21.

In the new House District 92 seat, Tonya Anderson and Doreen Williams are in a run-off. Anderson, the former mayor of Lithonia, had 24.6 percent of the votes to Williams’ 24 percent.

In DeKalb District 4 Commissioner Barnes Sutton fended off two opponents to

win with 73 percent of the votes.Steve Bradshaw received almost 23

percent and Clyburn Halley got 4 percent of the

District 5 Commissioner Lee May, who was first elected in July 2006, beat back three challengers to win with 68.5 percent of the votes.

Ken Samuel got 13.3 percent of the vote, Gina Mangham, 13 percent, and Andre White, 6.3 percent.

Gannon, who has represented Super District 6 since 2005, garnered 75 percent

to defeat Edmond Richardson, who got 26.3 percent of the votes.

Richardson, who is May’s chief of staff, took a leave of absence to run for office. Gan-non was criticized in parts of north DeKalb for her opposition to the legislation that authorized the Brookhaven cityhood refer-endum. The 32,815 votes cast in the race was a tiny portion of 222,724 registered voters in that district that covers half the county.

Boyer easily beat her opponent Larry Danese in the Republican Primary in Dis-trict 1. Boyer received 76.5 percent of the votes. Danese, who ran against her before as a Democrat, received 23.5 percent of the votes.

First elected to the board in 1992, Boyer is the senior member and the only Republican on the DeKalb Board of Commissioners. She has no opposition in the November General Election.

Pam StephensonKathie Gannon Claudia LawsonHank Johnson Dax Lopez

Please see page 3

CrossRoadsNews August 4, 20122

Page 3: CrossRoadsNews, Aug. 4, 2012

3Hundreds are expect-

ed to attend DeKalb Com-missioner Stan Watson’s second annual Health, Wellness and Job Fair on Aug. 11 at the Greater Travelers Rest Baptist Church in Decatur.

The 10 a.m.-to-2 p.m. fair will offer free health

screenings and resources to improve physi-cal health and well-being. This year, Watson, who represents Super District 7, said health, wellness and unemployment and under-

Community “The district attorney has not brought an indictment yet. We expect they will make their determination.”

Put CrossRoadsNews to Work for You!

Call 404-284-1888 for Advertising Rates & Information

Election results to be certified Monday

Ex-principal, bookkeeper probed

Business Alliance sets safety meeting

Paper ties itself in feature category

Watson to host wellness, job fair on Aug. 11

Agnes Flanagan

Stan Watson

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State Court Judge Dax Lopez won with 57 percent of the votes to challenger Dionne McGee’s 43 percent of the vote.

Superior Court Judge Gail Flake won re-election with 71 percent of the votes to Michael Rothenberg’s 27 percent.

Two weeks before the election, Rothenberg was indicted on July 17 on six felony counts of theft by taking by a DeKalb Grand Jury. He turned himself in on July 18 and is out on a $100,000 bond.

Clerk of Superior Court incumbent Debra DeBerry won re-election with 61 percent of the vote. She had four chal-lengers, including the husband of former clerk and her boss Linda Carter whom she replaced. Her closest challenger, Oretha Brown-Johnson, got 13.5 percent of the vote. John

Carter got 12.5 percent of the votes followed by Cheryl Vortice with 7.6 percent and Frank Swindle with 5.7 percent.

Tax Commissioner Claudia Lawson won easily with 85.5 percent of the vote over op-ponent Melvin Tukes who got 14.5 percent of the votes.

Stephenson, the House District 90 in-cumbent, beat off challenger Scott Hughes with 79 percent of the votes.

In District 93, incumbent Darshun Kendrick was the victor with 60.5 percent of the votes. Challengers Glen Williams got 29.3 percent while Dexter Dawson got 10.2 percent.

Butler, the Senate District 55 incumbent, got 78.9 percent of the votes. Challenger Mark Williams got 21 percent.

In Senate District 44, Davenport got 48.4 percent of the votes to Buckner’s 42.3 percent. Marcus Davis, the second challenger, got 9.3 percent of the vote.

U.S. 4th Congressional District Rep. Hank Johnson won 76.9 percent of the votes to fend off challenges from Courtney Dillard, who got 19 percent of the votes, and Lincoln Nunnally, who got 4 percent. In November, he will face Republican J. Chris Vaugh who got 54.5 of the votes in his primary. I

In District 5, John Lewis won with 80.6 percent to challenger Michael Johnson’s 19.4 percent. The results of the elections are still unofficial. The DeKalb Elections office says the votes will be certified on Aug. 6.

Debra DeBerry

Gail Flake

dog-biting trial won. For Non-deadline Reporting, its story “Trayvon Supporters Target Georgia Law,” also written by Carla Parker, was the winner.

In the Hard Feature category, its story “Illegal Road Is a Total Travesty” about De-catur’s Snapfinger Lakes subdivision’s fight to get DeKalb County to abort an illegal road connecting through their subdivision for a business was the winner.

CrossRoadsNews stories about the DeKalb School Board’s controversial deci-sion to lease T-Mobile cell phone towers on a dozen school properties won the News Series category. Those stories were written by Ffrench Parker and Carla Parker.

In the Soft Feature category, judges found Ffrench Parker’s story “50,000 Pairs of Shoes Needed,” about Martin Kumi’s campaign to collect shoes for Liberia’s poor children and adults, and Lewis’ “De-voted Dads Watch Over Campus,” about a

group of fathers who volunteer at Southwest DeKalb High, worthy of the award.

The Pioneer Black Journalist Awards program is the AABJ’s signature event. It recognizes professionals in print, television, radio, public relations and digital media who have mastered their journalism skills to deliver interesting, compelling and accurate stories. Other winners included Atlanta Tri-bune Magazine, CNN, Morehouse College, News/Talk WSB, WABE 90.1 FM, WAGA-TV, WSB-TV, and WXIA-TV.

Condace Pressley from News/Talk WSB was awarded the 2012 Pioneer Black Journal-ist Award and recently retired WSB-TV news anchor Monica Pearson was awarded the first Presidential Award.

Actor Malcolm-Jamal Warner was master of ceremonies.

AABJ is one of the largest and most in-fluential chapters of the National Association of Black Journalists. It is the NABJ’s 2012 Chapter of the Year. For more information, visit www.aabj.org.

Former Cedar Grove Middle School principal Agnes Flanagan and former bookkeeper Patricia Murchinson are under investiga-tion after an audit found more than $66,000 missing from school accounts.

The audit, which was conducted in 2010, found $66,370.80 that went missing over a five-year period be-tween July 2005 and June 2010.

During that time, Murchinson received cash from various sponsors but auditors said that cash that was exchanged for coins/change received by the school “had not been receipted from the vending machines.”

DeKalb Schools spokesman Walter Woods said that after the audit was com-pleted on Oct. 28, 2010, the information was forwarded to the District’s Attorney Office and to Georgia’s Public Safety Commission in the spring of 2011 for action against Flana-gan’s educators license.

“The district attorney has not brought an indictment yet,” he said. “We expect they will make their determination.”

According to the report, the receipt books for the school’s step team and 7th Grade Jag-uars were not available for review during the 2006 school audit. Through a search warrant

issued from the DA’s office, the step team’s receipt book was found at Flanagan’s Clarkston home.

“The receipt book still con-tained yellow receipts totaling $945 which were not deposited in the local school checking account and are considered missing,” the report said.

When questioned about the missing receipt books, Flanagan stated that the two receipt books in question were lost by sponsors. “I requested a written statement from each of the sponsors but have not re-ceived a Step Team sponsor statement,” the report quoted her as saying. “I have turned in the response from the 7th Grade Jaguar sponsor. Everyone was given an accounting handbook that signed out a receipt book. This handbook explained all procedures for handling, receipting, and turning in all funds and books.”

Woods said the school district entered into an agreement in December 2010 with Flanagan to repay more than $11,000. He said she repaid about $6,800, then stopped making payments in spring 2011.

Flanagan was on administrative leave but resigned in January this year. Murchinson retired in November 2010.

employment are critical issues that impact quality of life.

“Providing a forum where information, resources and services are made available to my constituents is necessary and important,” he said.

DeKalb County’s Workforce Develop-ment and Police Department, the Georgia Department of Labor, the Department of Driver Services, and Walmart are among companies and agencies that have committed to participate.

Information about jobs posted on job data sites will be provided by Career Build-

Business owners and interested residents in the Wesley Chapel Corridor can attend a Business Alliance safety meeting on Aug. 9 at the Stonecrest Library in Lithonia.

The 10-to-11:30 a.m. meeting is pre-sented in conjunction with the South and East precincts, the Solicitor General’s Office, and the Board of Commissioners.

The Stonecrest Library is at 3123 Klond-ike Road.

For more information, e-mail [email protected] or call 404-286-7911.

ers and Opportunity Knocks, an employ-ment resource for those who seek careers in nonprofit organizations. The Atlanta Center for Self Sufficiency, a nonprofit whose programs serve recovering addicts and those with complicated criminal backgrounds, also will provide informa-tion about job readiness and placement assistance services.

The event is free and open to the public and no registration is required.

For more information, call Kelly LaJoie at 404-371-3681. Greater Travelers Rest is at 4650 Flat Shoals Parkway.

CrossRoadsNewsAugust 4, 2012 3

Page 4: CrossRoadsNews, Aug. 4, 2012

4By Jennifer Ffrench Parker

Ernestine “Ernie” McMillan, who fought breast cancer, survived domestic violence and championed the cause of other survivors, died July 31.

Ernie, as she was affectionately known, died at VistaCare Hospice at Emory University Hos-pital after being diagnosed last October with an aggressive liver cancer.

On her 70th birthday in April, families and friends helped her celebrate her life. President Barack Obama sent birthday greetings, and Commissioner Larry Johnson declared April 12 “Ernestine McMillan Day” in DeKalb County.

McMillan, who lived in Stone Mountain, was the longest-serving employee at South DeKalb Mall, now the Gallery at South DeKalb. She worked there for 25 years spanning several ownerships.

Tene Harris-Gallemore, the mall’s general manager, who worked with McMillan over the past nine years, called her an asset to their com-pany, the community, and the various organiza-tions and charities that she supported.

“Her passing is a loss to the South DeKalb community,” said Harris-Gallemore, who gave birth to her first child the same day that Mc-Millan died.

Harris-Gallemore said she will remember Ernie’s dedication to her job, to breast cancer and domestic violence issues, and to her grand-children.

“She was not a 9-to-5 employee,” Harris-Gallemore said. “Whether it was to come in, in

INDEX PAGE

Community

inDex to aDvertisers

CrossRoadsNews wins awards for outstanding journalism 1

CrossRoadsNews was the big winner at the Atlanta Association of Black Journalists’ 30th Pioneer Black Journalist Awards.

DeKalb, region reject T-SPLOST 1

The controversial penny sales tax for the transportation referendum went down like a ton of bricks on July 31.

Incumbents in local, state and congressional races stay put 2

Incumbents had a good day on July 31. From local to congressional races, the incumbents won with large margins in the general primary and non-partisan races.

Watson to host wellness, job fair on Aug. 11 3

Hundreds are expected to attend DeKalb Commissioner Stan Watson’s second annual Health, Wellness and Job Fair on Aug. 11.

Ex-principal, bookkeeper probed 3

Former Cedar Grove Middle School princi-pal Agnes Flanagan and former bookkeeper Patricia Murchinson are under investigation for $66,000 missing from school accounts.

Free screenings at Ellenwood fair 7

Health screenings, music, games and refreshments will be available on Aug. 11 at the Ellenwood Community Health Fair in Ellenwood.

McChesney loses seat; runoffs to settle 2 races 8

The July 31 elections were tough on DeKalb School Board incumbents.

Dance school holding open house 8

Food, fun and dance class demonstrations will be available at the Conservatory of Dance and Fine Arts open house on Aug. 4.

Support for non-English speakers 8

Non-English-speaking students will get educational and other services through the “PHLOTES to the Top” initiative.

Artist to discuss work at Cyclorama 9

Noted contemporary artist Kara Walker will discuss her provocative work as part of the Atlanta Cyclorama’s Civil War Series.

Mall hosting back-to-school fair 9

Free school supplies, health screenings, and a food demonstration will be available at the North DeKalb Mall Back-to-School Health Fair and Fashion Show on Aug. 4.

Scott Candler library opening set 9

The new Scott-Candler Library will be dedicated on Aug. 18 and will open for busi-ness on Aug. 20.

AAA Travel .....................................................9Access Advertising ....................................... 10Bryant Insurance Agency .............................. 11Cash Rentals ...................................................1Chimain Douglas Ministries............................9DeKalb Convention & Visitors Bureau............ 3Healthy Essentials ......................................... 11

Hibachi Grill ................................................... 5JHC Attorneys & Counselors at Law ............. 10Johnny Harris CPA ....................................... 10Kool Smiles P.C. ............................................. 7Malcolm Cunningham Auto Gallery..............12Oakhurst Medical Centers Inc. ....................... 7

Project Home Improvement ......................... 11Quenon Smith ............................................. 10SCS Energy.................................................... 11Soul Discount Fabrics .................................... 11Still Waters Youth Sinfo-Nia ...........................8The Addams Family .......................................9

TLA Foreclosure Prevention ......................... 11Tree Form Landscaping ................................ 11Trinity Social Services ................................... 10Best Buy Co. Inc. .................................... InsertsHolistic Health Management Inc. ........... InsertsWalgreens .............................................. Inserts

QuiCk Read

“She was always a sharp, classy, sensitive, loving and kind person. She cared about other people’s well-being.”

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LOCAL

SERVICES!LOCAL

GOODS!

Ernie McMillan remembered for activism, caring

Ernestine “Ernie” McMillan, 70, aided breast cancer patients and domestic violence survivors.

New rules require identifications to renew driver’s licenseThe Georgia Department of Driver Ser-

vices began using a new set of requirements for driver’s license renewal in July, resulting in long lines. Drivers can no longer renew a license online until after they have gone through the new procedure, called Secure ID.

If your current license is Secure ID compli-ant, it will be marked with a small yellow star in the upper right-hand corner. To renew a license that is not Secure ID compliant, drivers will

must show up in person at the DDS and bring at least one document to prove their identity – passport, citizenship or birth certificate, Social Security card, W-2, utility bill, bank statement or mortgage statement.

If your name has changed from the one shown on your primary identification docu-ment, you must bring your marriage certificate, marriage license application, divorce decree, adoption decree or other court order.

DDS only accepts immigration documenta-tion from non-citizens that is in the name in which you want to have your driver’s license/ID issued.

New Georgia residents who are under 18 should call DDS customer service at 678-413-8400 to obtain information about requirements such as driver’s education classes.

Secure ID is designed to put Georgia in com-pliance with the Federal Real ID Act of 2005.

the middle of the night or stay late, or work on snow days, she was always willing to do what was needed. She was totally committed.”

Brenda Jackson, her friend of 14 years, called her “an outstanding woman.”

“She was always a sharp, classy, sensitive, lov-ing and kind person,” said Jackson. “She just had a caring spirit about her. She cared about other people’s well-being. I am going to miss her smile

and her bubbly and positive personality.” McMillan was born to Ralph and Betty Bur-

dette in the West Virginia coal mining town of Jenkinjones. Her mother died when she 12 years old and she grew up with her aunt and uncle, Al-berta and Carl Mitchell, in Washington, D.C.

She moved to Atlanta in 1985 and joined South DeKalb Mall in 1987 as an executive management assistant.

McMillan founded Ernie’s Butterfly Assis-tance Inc. after surviving breast cancer in 2001. The organization provides emergency financial assistance, resources, information and educa-tion to breast cancer patients and victims of domestic violence.

She was also a big supporter of the Susan G. Komen Walk for Cancer and fielded a walk-ing team of “Ernie’s Butterflies” for the annual event.

McMillan was a board member of Safe Ha-ven Transitional Home and was instrumental in getting basic living resources, furniture, clothing and more for women and their children fleeing violent homes.

She is survived by her daughter Kim McMillan-Davis and sons Darell Brown and Keith McMillan, eight grandchildren, and a great-grandchild.

She was an active member of Greenforest Community Baptist Church in Decatur, where her home-going service will take place at noon on Aug. 4. The church is 3250 Rainbow Drive in Decatur. Gregory B. Levett & Sons Funeral Home on Flat Shoals Parkway is in charge of arrangements.

CrossRoadsNews August 4, 20124

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5another sales tax. It’s just too much.”

Mosby, who chairs the DeKalb Delegation to the General Assembly, said it’s time to create a real plan that brings everyone to the table.

“We need to have a statewide transportation

discussion to make Georgia competitive na-tionally and internationally,” he said.

“We need to have a serious discussion about MARTA and what we want to do with that transit system. The next plan should be a more inclusive plan that includes election officials and special interest groups. Everyone needs to be at the table.

“People need to know that their voices were heard.”

Mosby said that the discussions need to start as early as December. “We don’t need to wait for next year,” he said. “We need to start right away.”

plan,” he said.May said that any dialogue to fix the

region’s transportation problems needs to include all of DeKalb’s leaders, not just CEO Burrell Ellis. He said that he is willing to start working right away on a comprehensive solution.

“DeKalb County and its residents are still willing to be a part of the dialogue and pro-cess of making our region better and more competitive across the country,” he said. “The constituents of DeKalb have shown in the past that they are willing to support re-gional solutions such as MARTA and Grady Hospital.”

The failed tax was expected to raise $8.5 billion to fund 157 projects across the 10-county metro area. The plan was immedi-ately unpopular in DeKalb and Fulton, which would have paid two pennies in taxes while the other eight counties paid one.

Those two counties have been paying a penny tax to support MARTA for 40 years. Through 2011, they had paid $7.5 billion to support MARTA.

Under the plan, DeKalb was to get $556.8 million for projects entirely within the county and would have shared in another $700 million in projects with Atlanta and Fulton County.

South DeKalb leaders and residents opposed the referendum because a long-promised I-20 rail line to Stonecrest was not fully funded. Instead, the area was to get $225 million to build five bus stations that could be converted to rail stations later.

That was on Larry Harper’s mind when he went to cast his ballot at the precinct at Wesley Chapel Library in Decatur on Tuesday.

He said he doesn’t understand how DeKa-lb and Fulton counties were being asked to pay twice to benefit the other counties.

“They need to come up with a plan that will benefit everybody,” he said. “Why should we pay for something that will help others but not us? They said it’s going to create jobs but not for minorities. There should be something in the referendum that says some of the [construction] contracts will go to minority companies.”

Felton Glass, who lives in Lithonia, said he had no choice but to vote no.

“We already pay a penny tax for MARTA,” he said. “We have been paying for 40 years. They have to catch up. They are giving Emory a train and we are getting bus service. MARTA needs to go to all 10 counties.”

State Rep. Pam Stephenson, who watched the results with a group that included state Reps. Howard Mosby and Dee Dawk-ins-Haigler and DeKalb School Board member Jay Cunningham at Java De-light cafe in Decatur, said the message was clear.

“It says that we all should go back to the table together to solve this traffic problem,” she said. “When all the people are at the table, good things happen. It has to be inclusive. We are a region, but we can’t just say we are a region without recognizing that it’s all-inclusive.”

May called on Gov. Nathan Deal to give strong consideration to calling a special ses-sion this November to have a new T-SPLOST referendum put before voters. “I hope that our regional leaders heard the voice of hard-working families who are willing to invest to improve transit but only if they can see the benefit,” he said.

Evans said that the price of food and gasoline is going up.

“Our water bill is going up,” he said. “The County Commission raised our taxes. The School Board increased our taxes. Un-employment is up. People are not work-ing. On top of that you are talking about

Community PG

Community “We need to have a serious discussion about MARTA and what we want to do with that transit system.”

DeKalb narrowly nixes new tax Tax-free holiday returns Aug. 10-11

Howard Mosby

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MUST BE PRESENT AT TIME OF DRAWINGS TO WIN

By Christiana Clerk

After a two-year hiatus, tree-free shop-ping is back in Georgia.

On Aug. 10-11, families shopping for back-to-school supplies will not have to pay seven percent sales tax. On Oct. 5-7, sales tax will be waived on energy-efficient appliances. It also applies to phone and online purchases.

Citing a $2 billion deficit, Georgia scrapped the holidays, which cost about $13 million in sales tax, in 2010 and 2011. This spring, state legislators approved the two tax holidays for 2012 and 2013, and Gov. Nathan Deal signed it into law on April 19. It is applicable on school supplies priced up to $20; clothes and footwear priced up to $100; and on computers and accessories priced up to $1,000.

“It will help a lot in terms of the price,” said Shenequa Stephen, who will be shop-ping for her three children.

Retailers are excited about the return

of the holiday. Donald Bieler, marketing manager at the Mall at Stonecrest in Lithonia, says the tax-free holiday always brings an influx of shoppers.

“When we have it, we have a significant increase in sales,” he said. “It helps our retail-ers during the crucial back-to-school shop-ping season when parents know they get that extra seven percent savings.”

At the Gallery of South DeKalb, market-ing manager Monica Hawkins said there is great anticipation around the tax-free shop-ping days and they are readying themselves for a busy weekend.

Stephen and other parents bemoan the lateness of the holiday.

“It would have been better if it had come at least a week before school started rather than the weekend before when everyone will be crammed in stores shopping,” Stephen said.

For more information about Georgia’s 2012 sales tax holiday, visit www.etax.dor.ga.gov or call 404-417-6601.

CrossRoadsNewsAugust 4, 2012 5

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6

Exhibitors: Aflac - Pamela HolmesAmerigroupBig Thinkers Science ExplorationCompassionate NursesCraig B. Williams DDSDeKalb County Board of HealthDeKalb County Solicitor-General’s OfficeExcellent MontessoriFaith Community Christian AcademyForever Pink FoundationGeorgia Perimeter CollegeGreen Pastures Christian MinistriesGreenforest McCalep Christian AcademicKaiser PermanenteKingdom Covenant Leadership InstituteNeighbor to FamilyNewburn Reynolds PhotographyOakhurst Medical CentersOptimal Health & WellnessOrganic Root StimulatorOrganizing for AmericaSparks Christian AcademySykes Tutoring ServicesWalgreensWellCare of Georgia

FinanceCrossRoadsNews August 4, 20126

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7

Wellness

Wellness

Free screenings at Ellenwood fair

Oakhurst ground-breaking set

Oakhurst Medical’s Dr. Shaveanda Queen screens a patients. The center is breaking ground Aug. 7 on a new facility in Stone Mountain.

Health screenings, music, games and refreshments will be available on Aug. 11 at the Ellenwood Community Health Fair in Ellenwood.

The 11 a.m.-to-3 p.m. event is sponsored by Bridge Builders of Atlanta Inc.

The Southside Mobile Medical Clinic will provide diabetes, hypertension, cholesterol, and body mass index screenings.

Bridge Builders is seeking participation of vendors from traditional and alternative health care services; preventive medicine,

community health and nutritional educa-tion professions; and public health agencies. Space is available at no charge.

The nonprofit opened its doors to the El-lenwood/Stockbridge community in March, providing free food assistance to disadvan-taged families. It is located in the Chavez Plaza Shopping Center, 339 Fairview Road.

To become a vendor at the fair, e-mail [email protected] or contact Rob Woods at 404-468-6681 or Adrian Moore at 770-771-9893.

Oakhurst Medical Centers will celebrate National Health Center Week on Aug. 7 by breaking ground on a new $5 million health center and administration complex in Stone Mountain.

U.S. Rep. Hank Johnson and community leaders will join the center’s staff and clients for the event at 5582 Memorial Drive.

The 27,000-square-foot facility, which will double the size of its existing 13,500-square-foot facility on Village Drive in Stone Moun-tain, is expected to open in fall 2013.

The theme for National Health Center Week, which is being observed Aug. 5-11 this year, is “Celebrating America’s Health Cen-ters: Powering Healthier Communities.” The theme underscores how community health centers provide access to affordable, high quality, cost-effective health care to medically

vulnerable and underserved people through-out the United States.

The federally qualified Oakhurst Medical Centers has provided medical services – fam-ily medicine, pediatrics and ob/gyn services – to more than 14,000 adults and children annually to residents lacking health insur-ance since 1981. It has three health centers in DeKalb County and plans a fourth health center in Rockdale County soon. Its other DeKalb centers are on Candler Road and at Covington and Memorial Drive in Decatur.

Oakhurst is one of 171 community health centers that received $728 million for 398 renovation and building projects from the Affordable Care Act in May.

For more information, visit www.oakhurstmedical.org, www.healthcenter week.org and www.nachc.org.

CrossRoadsNewsAugust 4, 2012 7

Page 8: CrossRoadsNews, Aug. 4, 2012

8

DeKalb CEO Burrell Ellis announces the PHLOTES initiative, which aids English-as-a-second-language students and families.

The open house of the Conservatory of Dance and Fine Arts at its new Lithonia location will feature dance class demonstrations plus food and fun.

Dance school holding open house

300 kids to get makeovers, supplies

Support for non-English speakers

McChesney loses School Board seat; runoffs to settle 2 racesYouth “The main thing I hope to change is the dynamics of the board and

help bring the board together.”

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STRINGS AND BAND INSTRUCTION

By Carla Parker

The July 31 nonpartisan elections were tough on DeKalb School Board incum-bents.

One lost his seat, one is in a runoff, and the third barely beat back a challenger.

District 2 member Don McChesney lost to Marshall Orson, who got 61.7 percent of the vote to his 38.2 percent.

In District 4, incum-bent Paul Womack will face challenger Jim Mc-Mahan in the Aug. 21 run-off elections. Womack got 47 percent and McMahan, 27.7 percent.

District 8 incumbent Pam Speaks beat back challenger Michelle Clark with 51.7 percent to Clark’s 48 percent. In the two weeks leading up the election, in robo-calls to voters, Clark identified herself as a Democrat and painted Speaks as a Republican even though the race is nonpartisan.

In the race for the open District 6 seat, Dr. Melvin Johnson and Denise E. McGill will face off in a runoff.

Johnson led the four candi-dates with 39.7 percent. McGill came in second with 30.1 per-cent. LaTasha Walker got 20 percent and Dr. Terriyln Rivers Cannon got 9.9 percent.

Johnson, who retired in 2004, worked for more than 37 years in the DeKalb system, 18 in administration. Two of his four children graduated recently from Redan High.

McGill is a Stone Mountain business consultant and co-founder of the nonprofit Stone Mountain-Lithonia Youth Empower-ment Services Inc. She has two children who graduated from Stephenson High.

McChesney, a retired educator who leaves the board on Dec. 31 at the end of his term, has been on the board for four years. He and Orson, a consultant and attorney, ran against each other in 2008 for the vacant District 2 seat. McChesney won that seat in a runoff against Fulton County teacher Ella Smith.

Orson said Thursday that he is excited at

the opportunity to be a board member but knows there is a lot of work to be done to improve the district.

“Some of the main concerns that I have about the district are the financial issues and the inability of the board to work together,” he said. “The main thing I hope to change is the dynamics of the board and help bring the board together.”

Orson has two children in DeKalb schools, a fifth-grader at Fernbank Elemen-tary and a seventh-grader at Druid Hills Middle. He is chairman of the Fernbank and the Druid Hills school councils.

Besides his knowledge of the schools, Or-son also brings a business background to the board. He worked at Turner Broadcasting, with five years as vice president and general

manager of the Turner Trade Group.He said he will work with Superintendent

Cheryl Atkinson to make sure the school system moves in the right direction. “If we’re going to have a school system that works, we have to work with the superintendent.”

McChesney’s loss comes a week after a controversial e-mail he sent about women surfaced. McChesney sent the e-mail last September to Jim McMahan inviting him and others to a meeting with the newly ap-pointed superintendent.

He wrote, “I also chose all men to try to get away from many emotional issues that are sometimes the center of argument.”

Carol Napier, who has two daughters in the school system, told WSB-TV last week that McChesney has “sexist beliefs” and should resign. “It’s clear that he holds those beliefs deeply and he’s willing to communi-cate those beliefs and act on those beliefs in a very public manner.”

DeKalb voters also rejected the nonbind-ing advisory referendum on placing cell phone towers on school properties with a 62 percent “no” vote. District 5 board member Jay Cunningham was philosophical. “The people have spoken,” he said.

Jim McMahan Paul Womack Melvin Johnson Denise E. McGill

Marshall Orson

Three hundred children from various group homes will receive free makeovers from the nonprofit 2nd Blessings Image Makeover on Aug. 12 at ALS Career Institute in Decatur and ProWay Hair School in Stone Mountain.

The group’s hairstylists, barbers and makeup artists will provide grooming ser-vices and back-to-school supplies from 9 a.m. to 1 p.m. On Aug. 5, they will provide

services at hair schools in Clayton, Gwin-nett and Fulton counties. The events also will include food, music and special giveaways.

ALS Career Institute is at 1999 Candler Road in Decatur. ProWay Hair School is at 5684 Memorial Drive in Stone Moun-tain.

For more informat ion, v i s i t www.2ndblessingsimagemakeovers.com.

Food, fun and dance class demonstra-tions will be available at the Conservatory of Dance and Fine Arts open house on Aug. 4.

The noon-to-3 p.m. event will take place at the dance school’s new location at 5424 Hillandale Park Court, Suite B, in Lithonia.

There will be demonstrations by the award-winning D’Lauren Dance Troupe.

Michelle Douglas, conservatory director,

founded the school 17 years ago after work-ing as dance director at Soapstone Center for the Arts.

The school offers classes for boys and girls ages 2 to 18 and for adults in ballet, tap, hip-hop, jazz, pre-pointe, pointe, lyrical and African. Zumba and adult boot camp classes are also available. For more information, call 770-593-4600.

DeKalb’s non-English-speaking students will get educational, social, and work force services through the “PHLOTES to the Top” initiative.

PHLOTES, an acronym for Primary Home Lan-guage Is Other Than English, was created by the DeKalb County Higher Education Advisory Council, which is a partnership between the county and the school district, to address the needs of the student population whose original language is not English.

DeKalb has nearly 17,000 English-as-a-second-language students, many of whom qualify for language support services.

Organizers say “PHLOTES to the Top” leverages the resources of the county, col-leges and universities, and nonprofits like the United Way to enhance the capacity of these students and their families.

The program, which will be implemented this fall, will offer extended day program, social, and work force services for the k-12 students and their families to increase lit-

eracy, graduation, job readiness, and home ownership rates. It will take place Monday to Thursday, 5-9 p.m., in the Clarkston School Cluster and provides two tracks – one for students and one for families.

DeKalb CEO Burrell Ellis, who helped announce PHLOTES on July 25, said no one will be turned away.

“Anyone in DeKalb County who wants to take part in these services will be accom-modated,” Ellis said. “With this partnership, our community will be better prepared to leverage the opportunities of tomorrow and better equipped to serve our culturally diverse citizens.”

CrossRoadsNews August 4, 20128

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9

The Burundi Drummers will perform on Aug. 7 at Clarkston’s block party, which celebrates the grand opening of the renovated Milam Park and the National Night Out crime prevention event.

The 12,000-square-foot Scott-Candler Library at 1917 Candler Road replaces the 8,700-square-foot branch that has been on McAfee Road for 47 years. It opens on Aug. 20.

Kara Walker

Scene Her room-size tableaux of black cut-paper silhouettes challenge notions of race, gender and representation.

Artist to discuss work at Cyclorama

Scott Candler library opening set

Mall hosting back-to-school fair

Party to celebrate park, Night Out

Are you ready to operate in the Power and Anointing

of God ? Are you ready for Signs, Wonders, and

Miracles? Are you ready to hear the voice of God? Join

us on Saturday, August 18, 2012 at 9:00 a.m. at the

Colonnade Room, 8010 Rockbridge Road, Lithonia, GA.

Call to register at (678) 580-3310 or register online at www.chimaindouglasministries.org.

Your Life Will Never Be The Same!!! Bring a Friend, Co-worker, Pastor, Everyone is Welcome!

“The Fire of the Holy Spirit”Prayer and Miracle Service

Free school supplies, health screenings, nutrition workshops and a food demonstra-tion will be available at the North DeKalb Mall Back-to-School Health Fair and Fashion Show on Aug. 4.

The 11 a.m.-to-3 p.m. event takes place near Macy’s. It will include fitness workshops; back and foot massages; and vision, dental,

hearing and body mass index screenings.A fashion show will showcase the latest

back-to-school fashions and uniforms.There will be giveaways of book bags and

supplies.The mall is at 2050 Lawrenceville High-

way in Decatur. For more information, visit www.northdekalbmall.com.

Noted contemporary artist Kara Walker will discuss her pro-vocative work on Aug. 10 as part of the Atlanta Cyclorama’s Civil War Series.

“The Art of War” begins at 6 p.m. with free admission and parking.

Walker, 42, is known nationally and internationally for her room-size tableaux of black cut-paper silhouettes that challenge notions of race, gender, repre-sentation and censorship. She will talk about what inspires her, the challenges she faces, the impact of her work in the world, and what she envisions for the future. Walker also will tie the themes of her work to those repre-

sented by the Atlanta Cyclorama.Her work was included in the

1997 biennial exhibition at the Whitney Museum of American Art. That same year, she became one of the youngest recipients of the prestigious John D. and Cath-erine T. MacArthur Foundation’s “genius” grant.

Walker currently lives in New York, where she is a professor of visual arts in the MFA program at Columbia University.

The Atlanta Cyclorama & Civil War Mu-seum is in Grant Park (next to Zoo Atlanta) at 800 Cherokee Ave. S.E. in Atlanta.

For more information, call 404-658-7625.

The new Scott-Candler Library will be dedicated on Aug. 18 and will open for business on Aug. 20.

The 12,000-square-foot building, at 1917 Candler Road in Decatur, was completed in December. It replaces the 8,700-square-foot Scott Candler Library, which has been on McAfee Road for 47 years.

The dedication ceremony begins at 10 a.m.

Designed by the Sizemore Group ar-chitectural firm, the new branch is part of a mixed-use development that eventually also will include a new senior center and senior housing.

It will have a collection of 30,000 vol-

umes, a 90-seat meeting room, special areas for children and teens, self-checkout stations, and 27 public access computers.

The new branch is among the final four new and expanded facilities funded by the 2005 parks bond fund that raised $54.5 mil-lion for the construction of five replacement facilities, four expanded and renovated li-braries, and three new libraries, bringing the number of DeKalb library facilities to 25.

The bond does not provide for opera-tions costs.

Hours of operation will be Monday and Tuesday 10 a.m. to 8 p.m. and Wednesday through Saturday 10 a.m. to 5 p.m.

For more information, visit www.dekalb library.org or call 404-370-8450.

Clarkston residents will be celebrating the grand opening of the renovated Milam Park and National Night Out on Aug. 7 with a block party.

The 6:30-to-8:30-p.m event will include American and international food, music, games, a display of public safety vehicles, a special appearance by the Batmobile, and a very special performance by the internation-ally famous Burundi Drummers of Atlanta.

Renovations at the park included a $10,000 renovation of the tennis courts, a $500,000 remake of the pool, modern play-ground equipment, refurbished restrooms, renovated multipurpose recreation areas for

soccer and baseball, new parking surfaces, refurbished pavilions with new grills, and a new Americans With Disabilities Act-compliant ramp and sidewalk that provide full accessibility to the entire park.

National Night Out, which is in its 29th year, is a crime and drug prevention event sponsored by the National Association of Town Watch.

Parking and shuttle transportation to and from the park will be available at Clarkston First Baptist and Clarkston United Methodist churches between 6 and 9 p.m. Milam Park is at 3867 Norman Road. For more informa-tion, call Keith Barker at 404-296-6489.

CrossRoadsNewsAugust 4, 2012 9

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10youth PG

Marketplace

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reAder noticeAs a service to you – our valued readers – we offer the following

information: This newspaper will never knowingly accept any advertise-ment that is illegal or considered fraudulent. If you have questions or

doubts about any ads on these pages, we advise that before responding or sending money ahead of time, you check with the Attorney General’s

Consumer Fraud Line and/or the Better Business Bureau. They may have records or documented complaints that will serve to caution you

about doing business with those advertisers. Also be advised that some phone numbers published in these ads may require an extra charge. In

all cases of questionable value, such as promises or guaranteed income from work-at-home programs, money to loan, etc., if it sounds too good

to be true – it may in fact be exactly that. This newspaper cannot be held responsible for any negative conse-

quences that occur as a result of you doing business with any advertis-ers. Thank you.

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attorneys counseling

surveys / research

financial

dental help wanted

Reach More of the People Who Matter Most – Local Customers!Call 404-284-1888 to Advertise in the CrossRoadsNews Marketplace

Your Source for Neighborhood News Call 404-284-1888 for Advertising Rates & Information

www.eastmetromarket.comFind Local Goods & Services

In-Home Counseling to Children/AdolescentsBehavioral & Emotional Disorders | Mental Illness | Substance Abuse

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CrossRoadsNews August 4, 201210

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11ministry PG

MArKetplAce rAtesPlace your MarketPlace line ad here – up to 20 words for $25. Additional words are $3 per block of five words (maximum 45 words). Boxed Ads (with up to 3 lines bold headline): $35 plus cost of the classified ad. Send ad copy with check or credit card information and contact phone number (if different from ad) to Market-Place, CrossRoadsNews, 2346 Candler Road, Decatur, GA 30032, or e-mail to [email protected]. Our deadlines are at noon on the Friday one week prior to publication, unless otherwise noted.

MarketplaceBusiness serVices

Custom Framing. Certified for twelve years. Mat cuts, glass replacement, shadowboxes, diplomas. Art and body oils for sale. Iah 404-389-2643

For rent/leAseFor rent. $780 a month. 3 bed-room, 1 bath, living, dining, wash & bonus rooms. Central heat/air. 2368 Marion Circle. Decatur, off McAfee. Call 678-641-7608.

2 single rooms for rent in base-ment of Decatur home. $100 weekly, $100 deposit. Utilities, Cable, Washer & Dryer included. 404-408-9125.

Senior Community 60 (Decatur) Share house w/other female seniors. Master Suite $400-Avail 9/1. Lovely & Safe Home. On Bus Route near Gresham. Emma Cares (770)885-2537.

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HoMe BAsed BusinessNo traveling required. Earn up to $1500/month P/T, $7500+/month F/T. As heard on Ellenwood radio. Call Arthur Toll Free 1-888-670-8493.

reAl estAteBuy Now. HUD Homes under $100,000. Call D. Walton 404-

932-4264. Solid Source Realty Ga. 8052 Mall Parkway, Lithonia, GA 30038.

serVicesBack to College Moving Services: Boxes, Books, TV, Refrigerator, Microwave, Etc. From Atlanta to There. Luke II 404-516-0632.

Sell Your House Fast. Facing Foreclosure. Behind on Pay-ments. Unwanted Inheritance. Problem Tenants. House Needs Repair.Together We Can Find A Solution. Call 1-866-210-9361 Today!

Event Photography - Corporate or Non-Profit. Also, studio or environmental portraits on loca-tion. 404-322-7322; [email protected]; www.curtisparkerphoto.com.

trAVelThe Explorers. Myrtle Beach Trip. When - Sunday Sept 2nd 2012. Cost - $80 per person. Dead-line - August 25, 2012. Jemma 404-643-4625.

insurance landscaping

home services

public notice retail

services

wellness

financial

If This Was Your Ad, Someone Would Be

Seeing It Now!Call 404-284-1888 today for rates & information.

TREE FORMLANDSCAPING

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www.treeform.net

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www.projecthomimprv.comwww.projecthomimprv.com

LSBE/MBE/WBE PARTICIPATION SOUGHT

SCS Energy intends to respond to DeKalb County’s ITB No. 11-11-100253 titled “Operation and Maintenance Services of a 3.2 Mega Watt Green Energy Facility.”

SCS is seeking LSBEs, MBEs and WBEs to supply equipment, materials and services. Contact Gary Scherbert at [email protected] or (678) 319-9849 for description of procurement opportunities available.

Opportunities include, but are not limited to, electrical and mechanical installation and repair services, and the provision of lube oil and other plant operating materials and parts.

Soul Discount Fabrics & Upholstery

Soul Discount Fabrics & Upholstery

279 Candler Road Atlanta, GA 30317

(near Memorial Drive)

MEMORIAL DRIVE SE

GLENWOOD ROAD

CA

ND

LER ROA

D

ALSTON DRIVE SE John Is Back!

Open Mon-Sat 10 a.m.-6 p.m.404-963-6485404-966-8320✓ Dress Fabric ✓ Designer Fabric✓ Upholstery Fabric ✓ Drapery Fabric

Free Fabric with Upholstery

SALE ENDS JULY 31, 2012

CrossRoadsNewsAugust 4, 2012 11

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12BACK COVER

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CrossRoadsNews August 4, 201212