12-26-2014 buckhead reporter

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DEC. 26, 2014 — JANUARY. 8, 2015 • VOL. 6 — NO. 26 Buckhead Reporter www.ReporterNewspapers.net Inside ‘Urban camping’ Homeless: Don’t sleep here PUBLIC SAFETY 17 Deep history BBA makes $3,000 donation COMMUNITY 2 Predictions for 2015 COMMENTARY 12-13 Loudermilk Park now scheduled for completion in 2015 BY JOE EARLE [email protected] Work on renovating the triangular park at Peachtree and Roswell roads will continue into next year, wrapping up in February or March, ac- cording to the executive director of the Buckhead Community Improvement District. “By the end of February, you’ll look at it and go, ‘Hey, that’s a completed park,’” CID Executive Di- rector Jim Durrett said. e $2.5 million renovation of Charlie Louder- milk Park originally was scheduled to be complet- ed months ago, but construction was delayed so the work wouldn’t conflict with other nearby proj- ects, such as streetscape improvements around the Buckhead Atlanta development, Durrett said. e location of the park at the conjunction of two state highways made scheduling lane closings for construction more difficult than anticipated, he said. e CID’s early estimates said the park would be finished by last April, then by July. Work now is under way to install the park’s “hardscape,” Durrett said. “e hardscape is going great,” he said. e CID now hopes to hold a formal open- CONTINUED ON PAGE 2 BUCKHEAD PCID Work on a park honoring Charlie Loudermilk will wrap up in early 2015. The year brought out smiles in all of us, no matter if we were painting, dancing, counting or playing sports it was good to live in one of the Reporter Newspapers communities. We’ve selected a few of our favorite cover photos from 2014, shown here, with more on pages 8-9. Far left, Sammy Lesser, 4, shows off his “inner artist,” with mom Nancy’s help, during Dunwoody’s Lemonade Days Festival at Brook Run Park on April 26. Left, Blaire Bodell, 8, left, and sister Mara, 2, dance before an audience of “bunnies” at the Ashford Park Easter egg hunt in Brookhaven on April 12. Below, Simoni Castillo, nanny for Ansley Shane, 1, helps compare toes with Brutus, a Mastiff, during a program at the Buckhead Branch Library on July 17. Below, left, Julia Rutledge, front, with Susanna Robinson, back left, show “gator glory” during the Sandy Springs Youth Sports baseball and softball Opening Ceremonies and Parade at the Morgan Falls Athletic Complex on March 8. PHOTOS BY PHIL MOSIER YEAR IN REVIEW

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Page 1: 12-26-2014 Buckhead Reporter

DEC. 26, 2014 — JANUARY. 8, 2015 • VOL. 6 — NO. 26

BuckheadReporter

www.ReporterNewspapers.net

Inside

‘Urban camping’Homeless: Don’t sleep here

PUBLIC SAFETY 17

Deep historyBBA makes $3,000 donation

COMMUNITY 2

Predictions for 2015

COMMENTARY 12-13

Loudermilk Park now scheduled for completion in 2015BY JOE EARLE

[email protected]

Work on renovating the triangular park at Peachtree and Roswell roads will continue into next year, wrapping up in February or March, ac-cording to the executive director of the Buckhead Community Improvement District.

“By the end of February, you’ll look at it and go, ‘Hey, that’s a completed park,’” CID Executive Di-rector Jim Durrett said.

Th e $2.5 million renovation of Charlie Louder-milk Park originally was scheduled to be complet-ed months ago, but construction was delayed so the work wouldn’t confl ict with other nearby proj-

ects, such as streetscape improvements around the Buckhead Atlanta development, Durrett said.

Th e location of the park at the conjunction of two state highways made scheduling lane closings for construction more diffi cult than anticipated, he said.

Th e CID’s early estimates said the park would be fi nished by last April, then by July. Work now is under way to install the park’s “hardscape,” Durrett said. “Th e hardscape is going great,” he said.

Th e CID now hopes to hold a formal open-CONTINUED ON PAGE 2

BUCKHEAD PCID

Work on a park honoring Charlie Loudermilk will wrap up in early 2015.

The year brought out smiles in all of us, no matter if we were painting, dancing, counting or playing sports — it was good to live in one of

the Reporter Newspapers communities. We’ve selected a few of our favorite cover photos from 2014, shown here, with more on pages 8-9.

Far left, Sammy Lesser, 4, shows off his “inner artist,” with mom Nancy’s help,

during Dunwoody’s Lemonade Days Festival at Brook Run Park on April 26.

Left, Blaire Bodell, 8, left, and sister Mara, 2, dance before an audience of “bunnies” at the Ashford Park Easter egg hunt in Brookhaven on April 12.

Below, Simoni Castillo, nanny for Ansley Shane, 1, helps compare

toes with Brutus, a Mastiff, during a program at the Buckhead

Branch Library on July 17.

Below, left, Julia Rutledge, front, with Susanna Robinson, back left,

show “gator glory” during the Sandy Springs Youth Sports baseball

and softball Opening Ceremonies and Parade at the Morgan Falls Athletic Complex on March 8.

PHOTOS BY PHIL MOSIERY E A R I N R E V I E W

Page 2: 12-26-2014 Buckhead Reporter

C O M M U N I T Y

2 | DEC. 26, 2014 – JAN. 8, 2015 | www.ReporterNewspapers.net

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BBA makes donation for history projectTh e Buckhead Business Association has donated $3,000 to support Th e Buckhead

Heritage Society’s plan to tell Buckhead’s history through exhibits and signage in the community’s green spaces.

“Buckhead has a deep history, and the Interpretive Master Plan will ensure that history is preserved and retold to future generations,” BBA Executive Director Smita Solanki said in a press release. “We are excited about the opportunity to contribute to an initiative that will not only help improve the quality of life in Buckhead, but will preserve the unique heritage of our community.”

Th e BBA raised the money for the donation during a silent auction at September’s Taste of Buckhead.

Financing approved for Gateway project road

realignment Sandy Springs City Council on Dec. 16 agreed to pay $4.7 million from bonds to

companies realigning roads around the Gateway Project development.Th e agreements with the Sandy Springs Development Authority and companies

associated with the JLB Gateway mixed-use redevelopment project cover use of bond monies to pay to realign roads at Windsor Parkway and Roswell Road.

Th e Gateway Project Companies, JLB Chastain LLC, JLB Chastain Phase II LLC and Sandy Springs Gateway Owner LLC will make contract payments to the Sandy Springs Authority with the authority paying an amount equal to the contract pay-ment to the city.

In July, the council approved an application from JLB Partners to rezone property on the west side of Roswell Road, about 135 feet north of the intersection of Wind-sor Parkway and Roswell Road. During the meeting, the council also adopted a reso-lution approving a proposal to realign the Windsor Parkway intersection.

JLB Partners’ mixed-use redevelopment replaces two older apartment complexes with new apartment homes, offi ce space, restaurants and retail. Th e plan drew strong criticism from residents in nearby Buckhead neighborhoods.

BRIEFS

ing for the park in late March or early April, Durrett said.

“Getting that park done is our high-est priority now,” he said.

Plans for the park, bordered by Peachtree and Roswell roads and Sar-dis Way, called for the construction of a clock tower, the addition of a statue of park namesake and Buckhead busi-nessman Charlie Loudermilk, covered seating, and grass and trees.

Th e clock tower is being built in

two parts, Durrett said. Th e base will be built at the site, while the top of the tower, including clocks and bells, will be built in North Carolina and moved to the site, he said. Th e tower is mod-eled on a larger clock tower at the Uni-versity of North Carolina, which Lou-dermilk attended, Durrett said.

Th e plan now is to put the clocks atop the tower in late February, he said.

“We’re trying to keep the work moving forward,” he said.

CONTINUED FROM PAGE 1

Park honoring Loudermilk nearing completion

BH

Page 3: 12-26-2014 Buckhead Reporter

www.ReporterNewspapers.net | DEC. 26, 2014 – JAN. 8, 2015 | 3

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4 | DEC. 26, 2014 – JAN. 8, 2015 | www.ReporterNewspapers.net

2 0 1 4 Y E A R I N R E V I E W

It was a year for New Things. The year 2014 brought lots of new things to Buckhead: a new trail, a new park, new high-end shops, new ideas for ways to look at local history, new controversies, new elected officials.

Here’s a look at some of the big stories told in Buckhead during the past year.

Rectory plan ignites neighborhood When officials at the Archdiocese of Atlanta decided to convert a home at 136

W. Wesley Drive so it could house six priests, neighbors objected. Residents ar-gued the building, called a rectory, didn’t belong in a single-family neighborhood, and that it would be too big and too busy for the area.

Officials from The Cathedral of Christ the King responded that the rectory would, in fact, be the priests’ home. “The rectory will be a home for the priests,” Monsignor Francis McNamee, the rector of the Cathedral of Christ the King, told board members. “It will not be an extension for the work of the cathedral. It is our home.”

Members of the board of Neighborhood Planning Unit-B and the Atlanta Board of Zoning Adjustments sided with the archdiocese and upheld the permits the archdiocese needed to convert the house to a home for the priests.

Atlanta History Center re-imagines itselfThe Atlanta History Center has begun a dramatic overhaul of its West Paces Fer-

ry Road facilities that will bring up to $50 million in new projects and programs to its Buckhead campus.

The center has begun working on a new entrance for its museum building, plans a new display of Atlanta history, will add an historic log cabin to its collection, and is negotiating to provide a new home for the historic Cyclorama painting. History Cen-ter leaders say they intend for the work to lure more visitors and to open the facility to the community.

“It’s definitely an exciting time,” History Center Vice President Hillary Hardwick said. “It’s a great time for Atlanta and it’s a great time for the Atlanta History Cen-ter. We used to say we were one of Atlanta’s best kept secrets — and we didn’t say that proudly. We want to open up.”

New school superintentent, elected officials ready to serve

Buckhead Heritage proposes magical history tours

Tourists could walk a park trail surrounded by ghostly Civil War soldiers cut from metal, see a modern building through a clear panel etched with a photo of how that very spot looked 50 years ago or be photographed on a shopping spree alongside life-sized images of shoppers from a half century ago. Those are some of the ideas the Buckhead Heritage Society developed as ways to illustrate the community’s history.

“We want people to ask, ‘What’s going on?’ ‘What’s the story here?’” said Erica Danylchak, executive director of the nonprofit group created to identify, preserve and promote Buckhead history.

The nonprofit proposes organizing Buckhead history around five timelines that in-clude its early years; the Civil War and War of 1812; African-American history; peri-ods residents pursued in less savory pursuits, such as moonshining; and the commu-nity’s shift from farm country to suburb to urban community.

BH

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www.ReporterNewspapers.net | DEC. 26, 2014 – JAN. 8, 2015 | 5

2 0 1 4 Y E A R I N R E V I E W

Here are the most popular articles from Buckhead posted at ReporterNewspapers.net in 2014.

1. Closed: Fulton County, DeKalb County and Atlanta Public Schools can-cel classes for Tuesday, Jan. 7

2. Atlanta Police seek help finding Buckhead assault suspects3. Festival of Trees gets new home after Atlanta History Center reaches out4. Perimeter market becoming ‘economic hub’ of metro Atlanta region5. Bike share program coming to Atlanta

Community gets more green spaceResidents long have claimed that Buckhead has too few parks for a community of

its size. This year, several groups began addressing the community’s parks problems by expanding or improving green spaces.

The nonprofit Atlanta Memorial Park Conservancy announced plans for a $10 million to $15 million renovation of the park, including the Bobby Jones Golf Course and Bitsy Grant Tennis Center, that is expected to take 10 to 15 years, and said the update would be the first at the golf course in eight decades.

Meanwhile, the Blue Heron Nature Preserve added 4 acres fronting Land O’Lakes Drive; the city of Atlanta opened for public use a 15-acre site on the Chattahoochee River at the historic location of Fort Peachtree; and Livable Buckhead announced the first phase of a trail along Ga. 400, known as PATH400, would open Jan. 9.

North Buckhead Civic Association plans its future

The North Buckhead Civic Association says its neighborhood is one of the largest in the city. This year, association leaders hired consultants and held community meet-ings to draw up a long-range plan for the community.

The plan, designed to guide development in the area for the next quarter century, calls for new sidewalks, trails, bike lanes, crosswalks, greenspace and mixed-use zon-ing along Roswell Road. Association leaders intend to present the plan to Atlanta city officials for adoption early in 2015.

“Most of the things in the plan I will never see,” resident Bob Young said after looking over the proposals. “But we’ve got to look beyond that and do the best we can for the folks who will still be here.”

Maria Carstarphen takes control of Atlanta Public Schools

The new superintendent of Atlanta Public Schools, Meria Carstarphen, arrived in August and set off on a charm offensive that included several stops in Buckhead. She chatted with the Buckhead Council of Neighborhoods in August and appeared at North Atlanta High Sept. 9 for her first “State of the Schools Address.”

Her message was direct and clear: It’s time to remake a school system battered by a cheating scandal that led to criminal charges and trials of teachers and high-level ad-ministrators. “We need to embrace a fully-functioning school system,” Carstarphen told members of the BCN. “We are all APS, and what we have to ask ourselves is, How do we make the entire system strong?”

New elected officials take office

Buckhead is being represented by new faces in the state Legislature and on the Fulton County Commission. After veter-an Rep. Ed Lindsey decided to seek a seat in the U.S. House, Republican Beth Beskin won a three-way race to claim the seat rep-resenting House District 54, which takes in much of Buckhead. Meanwhile, Buckhead resident Lee Morris, a former Atlanta City Councilman, takes the recently redrawn District 3 seat on the Fulton Commission.

BH

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6 | DEC. 26, 2014 – JAN. 8, 2015 | www.ReporterNewspapers.net

2 0 1 4 : Y E A R I N R E V I E W

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State Farm’s arrival, Buckhead Atlanta highlight past year

State Farm breaks ground in DunwoodyConstruction began in May on a new high rise

across from the Dunwoody MARTA station to house a new national operations center for State Farm, one of three the insurance giant was build-ing across the country.

� e overall project, its Texas developer said, will take years to complete and will include 2.3 million square feet of o� ces, 100,000 square feet of restaurants and shops, and a 200-room hotel. � e � rst building will provide 13 � oors of o� ces perched atop a 7-story parking building.

� e Atlanta Business Chronicle called the project one of the largest corporate of-� ce developments in metro Atlanta history. Folks in Dunwoody began to talk of a “ripple e� ect” from the project that would lead to even more development.

For its part, State Farm plans to post thousands of employees to its Dunwoody campus and promised to get deeply involved in its new community. “We are excited. We are so excited about what the future holds,” State Farm Vice President and COO Michael Tipsord told members of the Dunwoody Chamber of Commerce. “We are excited by the talent. We are excited about the business environment.”

The billion-dollar highway project It’s expected to cost a cool $1 billion before it’s done and has been described as

the most expensive road improvement project ever undertaken by the Georgia De-partment of Transportation. But local businesspeople, the Perimeter Community Im-provement Districts and Gov. Nathan Deal all threw their weight behind a redesign of the Ga. 400/I-285 interchange, so plans for the project have moved quickly.

DOT says the new interchange will stretch from west of Roswell Road to east of

“Live, work, play.” Politicians, busi-ness leaders and residents repeated those three words throughout 2014 as a man-tra devised to explain the lure of north metro Atlanta to businesses.

Both Buckhead and the Perimeter – that loosely de� ned area alongside the top end of I-285 and encompassing por-tions of Sandy Springs, Dunwoody and Brookhaven – o� er MARTA stations, regional shopping malls, apartments, hotels and relatively easy access to just about everywhere in Atlanta.

Finding live, work and play in one place was enough to attract some pretty big names, including State Farm, which said it was moving to Dunwoody to ap-peal to the younger workers known as “millennials.” Other businesses shot for even higher targets: Buckhead Atlanta, a shopping and living center in itself, talk-ed about luring the rich from around the world to � ll its new high-end stores.

When it came to business news, there was plenty to talk about in 2014. Here are some highlights.

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www.ReporterNewspapers.net | DEC. 26, 2014 – JAN. 8, 2015 | 7

Ashford-Dunwoody, and from Hammond Drive to the Glenridge Connector. At Hammond, it connects to another project that adds collector and distributor lanes along Ga. 400.

� e new interchange was promoted as good for business because it addressed traf-� c troubles in the Perimeter area and would help cross-country carriers who expect more freight once the port in Savannah is deepened. Local residents seemed to like the new interchange, but fretted about construction over the next several years. “If it alleviates tra� c in the area, it’s a good thing,” Mike Buchbinder of Sandy Springs said in August. “But I think it’s going to make tra� c worse, especially when they’re building it.”

Buckhead Atlanta fi nally opens After years as little more than a hole in the heart of Buckhead, the development

known now as Buckhead Atlanta (originally named “� e Streets of Buckhead”) opened for business with big name, high-end shops such as Hermes, and lines of burger fans waiting for a space to open in the Shake Shack.

Developer OliverMcMillan wants to draw shoppers from around the world, and has promised a luxury shopping experience, including high-tech security; a valet ser-vice allowing customers to drop o� a car at one location and pick it up at another; and “park assist,” which directs drivers to empty parking spaces.

“We want shoppers and visitors to say, ‘We used to go to New York to shop, but now we come to Buckhead Atlanta,’” General Manager Michael Diamantides told members of the Buckhead Council of Neighborhoods.

Apartments sprout all overWhile Hines rethought its high-rise plans in Sandy Springs, other developers scat-

tered new apartments all over the map.In October, the Buckhead Coalition said 30 di� erent projects totaling 9,422 units

were planned in Buckhead. In Sandy Springs, workers cleared ground for the Gate-way Project, a mixed-use development on Roswell Road, and the city approved an-other large apartment complex nearby. Developers added apartment complexes on Hammond Drive in Sandy Springs and Dresden Drive in Brookhaven.

“Apparently, it’s a direct response to the population growth of 25- to 35-year-olds who presently prefer the � exibility of renting, rather than owning,” Buckhead Coali-tion President Sam Massell said of the apartment announcements in Atlanta.

New zoning codes for Perimeter areaIn 2014, city o� cials in Sandy Springs and Dunwoody decided to take a fresh look

at zoning regulations for new projects in the Perimeter area. In May, Dunwoody o� -cials began working toward drawing up those regulations. In October, o� cials from Sandy Springs, Dunwoody and Brookhaven met to talk over requirements in the area.

Sandy Springs Mayor Rusty Paul said the idea was to get all the cities on the same page. “With an unprecedented surge in development interest,” Paul said, “we want to make sure we have a uni� ed, concise policy that allows for long-term economic via-bility of this market, as well as ensures a high quality of life for existing and future res-idents and visitors.”

2 0 1 4 : Y E A R I N R E V I E W

FILE

Front, OliverMcMillan’s Dene Oliver, center, Atlanta Mayor Kasim Reed and right, Buckhead Coalition President Sam Massell,

offi cially opened the fi rst shops at Buckhead Atlanta.

FILE

Hines Interests Limited Partnership will scale back its offi ce building from 50 to 42 stories.

Hines, for a moment, prepares to go bigFor a moment, there was talk of the possibility of a 50-story building in Sandy

Springs. It would have been the tallest outside the Perimeter. But Texas developer Hines, which proposed a couple of towers along with a rezoning for a mixed-use development that would have included 500 apartments, retail and hotel space, withdrew its rezoning request after repeated deferrals.

Members of Sandy Springs City Council said they needed more time to ad-dress residents’ concerns over increased tra� c that the development – to be lo-cated at Abernathy, Peachtree Dunwoody and Mount Vernon – would bring to an already congested area. In September, Hines had said they would study a new proposal that decreased the number of apartments, and took the o� ce building down to 42 stories.

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8 | DEC. 26, 2014 – JAN. 8, 2015 | www.ReporterNewspapers.net

2 0 1 4 : Y E A R I N R E V I E W

At left, Monk Sonam Cho-ephel extends a welcome to Narzin Khyunglho, 2,

wearing traditional Tibetan attire, during the annual

Atlanta Tibetan Festival on Nov. 2 at the Drepung Losel-ing Monastery. The monas-tery is located on Dresden

Drive.

Below at left, from left, Oliver Jackoniski, Brody Garrard, William O’Neil, Bryce Matlock and Kota

Suttle, members of the “Tin Caps,” the 6-year-old boys team, stand ready during Opening Ceremonies for

the Murphey Candler Little League Baseball season on

March 7.

Right, Alex Ozburn, left, and Chip Cary have a snack before watching the U.S.

men’s soccer team take on Portugal during SoccerFest,

an all-day World Cup viewing party held at Brookhaven

Park on June 22. The game ended in a 2-2 tie.

PHOTOS BY PHIL MOSIER

PHOTOS BY PHIL MOSIER

Far left, Mary Collier Thurman has her party face on while she watches the Carnaval parade during

International Travelers Week at Sarah Smith Elementary School on May 9. The event “took” students to Brazil,

helping them learn about the country’s culture.

Jordyn Vaxter, center, enjoys the storytelling portion of the “Juneteenth: The First Day of Freedom” program at the Atlanta History Center on June 21. The two-day celebration focused on the end of slavery in the U.S.

Abigail Frank, 2, above, awaits her turn at a popsicle stand while attending the annual Little Nancy Creek Park Fall Festival

on Sept. 26. Attendees enjoyed a food truck and live music.

BuckheadReporter

BrookhavenReporter

2014 brought festivals, sporting events and plenty of chances for people to play. Over the past 12 months, we published photographs resi-dents of Brookhaven, Buckhead, Dunwoody and Sandy Springs as they enjoyed numerous community activities. Here are some of our favor-ite cover shots from our various editions during the past year.

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www.ReporterNewspapers.net | DEC. 26, 2014 – JAN. 8, 2015 | 9

2 0 1 4 : Y E A R I N R E V I E W

Phil’s pick: Vocal fan at Soccerfest in Brookhaven

Phil Mosier teaches photography at Georgia Perimeter College and takes many of the photos that appear in Reporter Newspapers. We asked him to choose his favorite photo we published in 2014. Here’s his choice and his reason for choosing it.

“� is picture says it all, with a shout, about our community. I was able to capture a Latin American young man, happily waiving an American � ag, while watching the U.S. team score during a World Cup Soccer match beamed live to a diverse crowd in Brookhaven Park. Taking that photo made me proud as a citizen and as a photojournalist.”

LEFT AND RIGHT PHOTOS BY PHIL MOSIER

At left, Anisha Singh, 7, front, and Mei Kumaran, 5, attending the Spruill Center for the Arts’ summer camp program, play on “chess pieces” during recess on July 21.

JAMES BARKER PHOTOGRAPHY

At center, Dunwoody High School’s football Wildcats began their 2014 campaign with higher hopes, after a 3-7 season the previous year.

At right, Julie Greer, 2, daughter of Kimberly Greer, assistant to Dunwoody’s city manager, plays before the grand opening of Phase II of Brook Run Park’s multi-use trail on Aug. 23.

PHOTOS BY PHIL MOSIER

Left, “Hammerheads” teammates and twin sisters, May Weis, front, and Leah, center, with goggles, get themselves pumped up before a swim meet against

the Byrnwyck “Blue Dolphins” at the Hammond Hills pool on June 3.

Center, the city kept the Fourth of July holiday going with a community fi reworks show on July 5, at the Concourse Offi ce Park complex. Enjoying the night on the lawn, from left,

Chanse Hendrick, 4, Cameron Bignault, 5, Leila Wesley, 3, and Emily Volkman, 12.

Right, Collins Zgutowicz, 2, dressed as Snow White, creates a colorful chalk walkway at the Sandy Springs Farmers Market on Aug. 2.

DunwoodyReporter

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10 | DEC. 26, 2014 – JAN. 8, 2015 | www.ReporterNewspapers.net

2 0 1 4 : Y E A R I N R E V I E W

Do you know an organization or individual making a difference

in our community? Email [email protected]

Making a difference: Blessing bags, ‘scaring away’ autism and moreDuring the past several years, we’ve introduced read-

ers to some of their neighbors whose volunteer work has helped shape our communities into better places to live. Here are a few we met in 2014 who were making a di� erence and whose stories especially impressed us.

Jeff Marcus Sandy Springs doctor Je� Marcus’s Halloween dis-

play began as a simple family project. His daughter, Melissa, who is autistic, loved Halloween, with its cos-tumes and candy, so Marcus put an array of ghosts and witches in his front yard to delight her and his neigh-bors. He called the annual show “Scare Away Autism” and it now draws crowds of admirers.

A couple of years ago, Marcus and his family be-gan collecting donations from the people who came to admire the display. � ey gave the money to Autism Speaks, a charity that pays for autism research, advoca-cy and services for families with autistic members.

� is year, things really took o� . Marcus said the family collected nearly $13,000 for Autism Speaks, double the amount raised the year before. Marcus is already thinking about 2015. He said he wants to get others involved to help set up and market the display “to make it more of a community event.”

But in 2014, it remained the Marcus family’s show. Melissa had a great time greeting and thanking people who came to visit. “We had a good year,” Marcus said.

Robert Port � e � rst time Dunwoody lawyer Robert Port took

his bike to Israel, he thought it would be a good way to see another land close up. But after that trip in 2006, he was hooked. He returned in 2007, 2008, 2010 and 2013 to take fundraising rides across that country.

He � gures that through his rides he’s raised $20,000 to $25,000 for the Arava Institute of Environmental Studies, an academic program that brings Jordanian, Palestinian, Israeli and western students together at a kibbutz in the Arava Valley, which runs along part of the border between Jordan and Israel.

“� e goal is to have students of all these di� erent backgrounds come together and try to � nd some com-

monalities dealing with ... issues,” he said. “� e goal is to foster some cooperation and understanding on the environmental side and in other areas as well.”

Fran FariasSandy Springs Rotarian Fran Farias’ two disabled

brothers made her aware of the high cost of home med-ical equipment. So when she was looking for a way to utilize some money raised by the Rotary Club of Sandy Springs, she had an idea.

“No one [in the area] was really doing anything to recycle home medical equipment,” said Farias, who serves as Rotary’s community service director, is a past president and has been a member for 18 years. So last fall she started working on an idea for such a project. She approached the city, which referred her to Keep Sandy Springs Beautiful, which operates the city’s recy-cling facility on Morgan Falls Road.

Kathy Reed, executive director of Keep Sandy Springs Beautiful, said she was more than happy for the recycling center to house the Rotary’s trailer, where folks can drop o� unneeded medical items such as crutches, wheelchairs and walkers.

Matt AdamsHe’s been called a Pied Piper by a member of the

Chastain Park Conservancy. He’s been called a savior by parents. But Matt Adams says he just loves teach-ing children the game of golf.

“He's devoted his life to teaching kids how to golf and how to respect the game at the same time,” said the Conservancy’s Jay Smith.

Adam teaches golf clinics to children at the park’s North Fulton Golf Course. He’s been teaching for 35 years, 12 years at Chastain. He also helped found the Annual Sutton Middle School Invitational Golf Tournament, which draws 20 to 30 schools each year to the Bobby Jones Golf Course.

“He teaches them etiquette like shaking hands and saying ‘thank you,’” said � eresa Southerland, whose

two daughters Reagan and Steele take lessons with Ad-ams. “He just has a way with kids. One year he gave ev-ery one of them a new club or shoes.”

Greg Chevalier

In 2014, for the second straight year, members of a Brookhaven congre-gation gathered to stu� “blessing bags” as part of an e� ort to end the commer-cial sexual exploi-tation of children. Brookhaven Chris-tian Church host-ed the blessing bag event in partnership with Street Grace, an organization that aims to end the sexual tra� cking of children.

Greg Chevalier, coordinator of the program for Brookhaven Christian, also serves on the state of Geor-gia’s CSEC Task Force, an acronym which stands for Commercial Sexual Exploitation of Children. � rough the task force, Chevalier has helped create a curriculum to help educate organizations such as schools, neigh-borhoods, corporations and governments about the is-sue of commercial sexual exploitation of children.

� e city of Brookhaven recently joined the initiative, becoming Georgia’s � rst city to take part in a task force combating child sex tra� cking. At a Nov. 10 press con-ference and ceremony, city o� cials signed a “Not Buy-ing It” pledge.

Angi BemissAngi Bemiss has been described as an “on call” heal-

er who plays the harp for patients at Northside Hospi-tal twice a week through the hospital’s Healing Sounds Program. A certi� ed music practitioner, Bemiss says she plays di� erently depending on the audience. Her listeners range from newborn babies to people conva-lescing to people who are dying, she said.

She usually per-forms on Friday mornings and Sun-day afternoons. “Just a few hours ago, I was there and ran into a cancer patient wait-ing for her ride,” Be-

miss said recently. “Tears came to her eyes when she saw the harp, ‘Oh my, you played for me in May, when I was in the hospital and almost died. I still remember how your soothing music made me feel.’ � at's what it's all about!”

Page 11: 12-26-2014 Buckhead Reporter

C O M M E N T A R Y

www.ReporterNewspapers.net | DEC. 26, 2014 – JAN. 8, 2015 | 11

� ere are stories everywhere—in the stars, in the trees, in the grasses and glades. We � nd in those places heroes and monsters and fairies; we � nd re-membrances of our past and hope for our future.

I grew up surrounded with stories and delighted by them, because my mother is a storyteller.

She earned a degree in library science at Simmons College and a Master’s at Emory, and became a children’s librari-an (in the days before there were “media specialists”). She was the librarian at my elementary school and for years was the children’s librarian at Maude Burris Li-brary in Decatur.

My mother chose themes for her sto-ry hour, selecting her books accordingly, and she embellished her story-time with music, dance, puppets and handmade tokens. She had a special talent for lift-ing the tales right o� the page with her

voice until the stories wrapped them-selves around roomfuls of squirming children like a charmed cloak and left them completely entranced.

So it was high time that this year I should give mom the chance to tell her own stories. I booked an hour-long ses-sion with StoryCorps at the Atlanta His-tory Center, where I would interview her in a taped sound booth. � e time came and her stories unfolded. She talk-ed about her grandparents who emigrat-ed from Italy: her grandfather, a dap-per shoemaker, and her grandmother, a mother of seven who learned English from her children and then continued her English language education by walk-ing to classes until she earned her certif-icate of completion.

Mom told of her mother, who went to work at a candy store after school at age 13, calculating purchases and change on the back of a brown paper bag and presenting her salary to her father each week, in a sealed envelope.

Mom remembered watching an air-plane writing letters in the sky as a young girl in Brooklyn. Because it was the day after her birthday and she recognized the letter “R” from her name — and be-cause she was of the tender age when she

was sure that the world revolved around her—she thought it was spelling out her name as a wonder-ful surprise. But it was December 7, 1941, and the airplane was writing WAR in the sky.

Her father, in the Navy reserves, was deployed within days.

Mom told the story of how she met my father, the love of her life, and about their courtship and early marriage. She talked about his strength and quick wit throughout their marriage, a humor

which endured in spite of the pain of his cancer. And she spoke of how dearly we miss him now.

I have a CD copy of our session. It sits on my counter beside some can-did family snapshots, as a reminder to us to contin-ue telling our stories. And we do.

Every second of our lives is an experience. And I sometimes wonder which of our experiences will take shape into a story — solid enough to be passed around, resilient enough to with-stand the passing? Which

ones will lodge in our memories, and our children’s memories, and be handed down to their children and grandchildren? Which experiences, though they seem mundane to us now, will shed a glimmer of insight into our lives for those who look at us from the vast prospective of future generations?

� is year was � lled with new expe-riences for our family — some adven-turous, some silly, some mundane. But they hold the promise of more stories: eight Boy Scout buddies at Philmont Scout Ranch; seven hours of icy grid-lock, six people reunited for � anks-giving, � ve hours at the Smithsonian homosapiens exhibit; four extracted wis-dom teeth; three days at Cumberland Is-land; two graduations — two wonderful celebrations; and one massive zucchini.

We all have a lot to talk about. So cozy around the � replace in this

deep December, with the people you love and a mug of something hot. “Take a cup of kindness, yet, for auld lang syne.”

And as another year ends, tell your stories.

Robin Conte is a writer and mother of four who lives in Dunwoody. She can be contacted at [email protected].

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Page 12: 12-26-2014 Buckhead Reporter

C O M M E N T A R Y

12 | DEC. 26, 2014 – JAN. 8, 2015 | www.ReporterNewspapers.net

“Reconstruc-tion of the Ga. 400/I-285 in-terchange will begin fi nal pre-construction phases in ear-ly 2016. Our PCIDs support efforts by Gov. Nathan Deal and the Geor-gia General Assembly to identify $1 billion in funding for enhancing Geor-gia’s transportation infrastructure over the next fi ve years. The new in-terchange will have sustainable eco-nomic impact statewide. Traffi c con-tinues to be a top concern for metro Atlanta residents and commuters, and wishing alone won’t make the conges-tion ease.”

Yvonne Williamspresident and CEO, Perimeter Community

Improvement Districts

“One of the most signifi -cant things I foresee com-ing up for my constituents in House Dis-trict 54 in 2015 is addressing our transpor-tation issues. Georgia’s fail-ure to properly maintain and priori-tize upgrades to our transportation in-frastructure threatens our continued economic growth. The Joint Study Committee on Critical Transportation Infrastructure Funding established by the Georgia General Assembly earlier this year will present its fi ndings and recommendations shortly. We must prioritize our transportation needs and identify sources of funding so Georgia can continue to grow and at-tract new businesses while maintain-ing and improving quality of life for our residents.”

Rep. Beth Beskin (R-Atlanta)

“Buckhead’s commercial skyline, which has mushroomed over the past quarter-of-a-century, beckons as a jobs mar-ket. Developers have read the census data and now scram-ble to fi ll the needs with 32 complexes offering over 10,000 compact, multifamily rental units for the millennials. The occupancy profi le will maximize pedestrianization, intro-duce technical startups, and share fresh thinking leadership. We have evolved from a ‘Bedroom Community’ in the ‘40s and ‘50s to a respectful ‘Boardroom Atmosphere,’ ensuring tomorrow’s economic success in our 28-square-mile bound-ary. We are the center of Atlanta’s metropolitan region and the ‘address of choice’ for urbanized quality of life.”

Sam Massell, president, Buckhead Coalition

“I’m upbeat for my North Buck-head neighbor-hood in 2015. • January: Rib-bon cutting for PATH400’s Tow-er Place to Old Ivy Road phase. PATH400 will transform pe-destrian mo-bility and recreation from North Buck-head south to I-85. • March: City Council is to approve the North Buckhead Neighborhood Mas-ter Plan. • June: Mountain Way Common be-comes a real, usable park with the completion of a major pedestrian bridge over Little Nancy Creek. • Later in 2015, PATH400 opens from Old Ivy Road to Wieuca Road.”

Gordon Certainpresident, North Buckhead

Civic Association

“2015 will be the year that high-rise res-idential real-ly begins to impact Buck-head’s com-mercial core. We will be-come more of a commu-nity, rather than a job and activity center, with a more healthy mix of jobs and hous-ing. The big question will be how this community gets around, so creating more attractive and safe options to get around on foot, on transit (MAR-TA’s 110 – “The Peach” – operates ev-ery 15 minutes on Peachtree, folks!), and on bicycle will be crucially impor-tant. We will also begin to create a safer Peachtree Road from Midtown up to Piedmont.”

Jim Durrettexecutive director,

Buckhead Community Improvement District

“2015 represents an opportunity to create connections which enhance access to the city’s essential amenities. Sev-eral key projects planned for 2015 which underline this con-nectivity include the construction of the new 5-acre Per-noshal Park, the construction of the Tilly Mill Road and North Peachtree Road intersection project, the Chamblee Dun-woody Road bicycle and pedestrian improvement project, and the construction of the connecting phase of the multi-use trail creating pedestrian and bike connectivity from the Georgetown area all the way to Brook Run Park. Our focus continues to emphasize investments in infrastructure, public safety and quality of life amenities.”

Mike Davis, mayor of Dunwoody

Q&A What do you think will make big news in 2015?

Our local communities delivered their share of big news in 2014. State o� cials proposed a billion-dollar construction project in Sandy Springs to remake the interchange of I-285 and Ga. 400. State Farm started construction on a new sky-scraper in Dunwoody. � e long-awaited Buckhead Atlanta shopping and housing area opened for business. Brookhaven

city o� cials cut a deal with the owners of the Pink Pony strip club that pays the city $225,000 a year and allows the club to stay open for six more years. We asked newsmakers from across Reporter Newspapers communities to play prognostica-tor and predict what big news or big events 2015 would bring. Here are their answers.

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Page 13: 12-26-2014 Buckhead Reporter

C O M M E N T A R Y

www.ReporterNewspapers.net | DEC. 26, 2014 – JAN. 8, 2015 | 13

“The most signifi cant thing that I see coming in my commu-nity is my re-introduction of the Independent School Sys-tem legislation. This would lift the constitutional prohibition on cities forming school systems that has been in place since 1945. With the state of DeKalb County Schools, this would allow individual municipalities to form local school systems.The second major thing is the start of construction of the Ga.400/I-285 interchange re-do. This project is the sin-gle largest transportation project in Georgia history and will bring needed traffi c relief in the area that currently sees 420,000 cars daily.”

Rep. Tom Taylor (R-Dunwoody)

“I am cautiously optimistic that 2015 will be the year we stem the tide of bad news for DeKalb County. It will re-quire hard work and compromise on the part of state legisla-tors, county offi cials and citizens in all areas of the county. DeKalb remains a desirable place to live. The headlines of the past couple years have raised signifi cant hurdles for our community. However, I am confi dent that working together we can overcome those hurdles this year.”

Rep. Mike Jacobs (R-Brookhaven)

“I believe the key issue in 2015 will be the outcome of the current cityhood movement now playing out between three key players: the future city of Tucker, the future city of LaV-ista Hills (formerly Lakeside), and then the ever-present de-sire of the city of Atlanta to expand its boundaries within DeKalb County. The fi ve-member State Legislative Committee recently set-tled the border dispute between Tucker and LaVista Hills by dictating the non-negotiable boundaries. The more signifi cant problem will be how far and how ag-gressive Atlanta will be in their move for expansion. Many is-sues are at stake: the cohesiveness of long-standing commu-nities; DeKalb County schools becoming part of the Atlanta Public Schools system; the expense of the inevitable legal fees to be paid by the DeKalb County School Board; the potential impact on our county’s improved status of Accredited Warning with SACS; the loss of a northern tier tax base for the already fi nancially distressed county government; and the list goes on... There is a 300-pound gorilla in the room. Atlanta sees a weakness and they are going after it, and what Atlanta wants, they usually get. This could be a defi ning year for DeKalb County.”

Joe Gebbia, Brookhaven City Councilman

“The most im-portant is-sue for DeKalb homeowners is that the Leg-islature make the proper-ty tax freeze permanent. It is set to ex-pire and home-owners will be subject to 10 years of assessment in-creases. The DeKalb House delega-tion through Mike Jacobs passed a bill last session and the Senate failed to act. People throughout the coun-ty should be outraged. Until this issue is resolved it will be diffi cult for most DeKalb legislation to move forward.”

Sen. Fran Millar (R-Dunwoody)

“2015 will bring a new and potential-ly exciting dy-namic to the Fulton Coun-ty Commission, given the re-drawn district lines that gave additional rep-resentation to the northern part of the county and the election of three new commission-ers to the seven-member body. The increased representation from the northern part of the county that pays so much of the tax burden, hopeful-ly will result in a county government that is more effi cient and effective, and more ‘customer friendly’ to all citizens of the state’s largest county.”

Fulton County Commissioner Lee Morris

“For us, it’s the City Center (getting it out of the ground), and developing strategic plans for the Perimeter and Powers Ferry and Roswell road areas to set a 15-year guide path to work through what we want those three areas of the city to look like in the future. That’s 2015 for me – getting the City Center out of the ground and having an opportunity to plan the next 15 years.”

Sandy Springs Mayor Rusty Paul

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Page 14: 12-26-2014 Buckhead Reporter

out& aboutBROOKHAVEN • BUCKHEAD • DUNWOODY • SANDY SPRINGS

14 | DEC. 26, 2014 – JAN. 8, 2015 | www.ReporterNewspapers.net

L E T ’ S L E A R N !

Medicinal Plants Saturday, Jan. 10, 10 a.m.-1 p.m. Get a holis-

tic start to the new year! � is beginners’ class focuses on herbs and oils used since antiquity to treat a variety of ailments, with an emphasis on women’s needs and particular energizing blends that help chase the winter blues away. Class includes a hands-on presentation and crafting of � oral water and teas to take home. $30 gen-eral public; $20 members. Register by Jan. 7. Chat-tahoochee Nature Center, 9135 Willeo Rd., Roswell, 30075. Call 770-992-2055 or visit: www.chattnature-center.org for information.

Hawks and Owls Saturday, Jan. 10, 10:30 a.m.-12 p.m. Feathered

predators are guaranteed to liven up a cold winter’s day. Learn about the winter habits of hawks and owls. Live birds of prey will make an appearance, courtesy of AWARE (Atlanta Wild Animal Rescue E� ort). $10 per person. RSVP to 678-315-0836. Blue Heron Na-ture Preserve, 4055 Roswell Rd., Atlanta, 30342. Learn more by going to: www.bhnp.org.

Chinese AstrologySaturday, Jan. 10, 1-3 p.m. Chinese Astrology is an

ancient system of fortune telling that takes into consid-eration planets and the Sun, and calculates time in two-hour intervals. Each year is depicted by two elements, one of which is an animal. 2015 is the year of the Wood Goat. Learn what’s in store for the new year! Free and open to everyone. For adult, college, high school, mid-dle school audiences. Sandy Springs Branch Library, 395 Mount Vernon Highway, Sandy Springs, 30328. Email: [email protected] or call 404-303-6130 for details.

Personal Branding Saturday, Jan. 10, 1-3 p.m. Want to know how

to brand or market yourself to help your career? Learn personal branding techniques, including how to use social media to become a personal brand. Class limit-ed to 15 participants. For adults. Free and open to the community. Register by calling 770-512-4640. Dun-woody Branch Library, 5339 Chamblee-Dunwoody Rd., Dunwoody, 30338.

Organizing WorkshopSaturday, Jan. 10, 3-5 p.m. Join a certi� ed pro-

fessional organizer for a free workshop. Topics include: dealing with paperwork, mail, email, general house-hold clutter, time management strategies, goal setting, and the bene� ts of making a daily “to-do” list. All are welcome. For adult audiences. Sandy Springs Branch Library, 395 Mount Vernon Highway, Sandy Springs, 30328. Email: [email protected] or call 404-303-6130 with questions.

Dementia LectureSunday, Jan. 11, 4-5:30 p.m. Join geriatric special-

ist P.K. Beville as she shares her insight and practical tips to help families and caregivers more e� ectively man-age the challenges of loved ones with dementia. Free and open to the public. O� site shuttle service; park at Georgia Perimeter College, Lot 11 on Womack Road. RSVP to 404-410-1200 or visit: www.jewishhomelife.org. Marcus Jewish Community Center Atlanta, 5342 Tilly Mill Rd., Dunwoody, 30338.

Page 15: 12-26-2014 Buckhead Reporter

www.ReporterNewspapers.net | DEC. 26, 2014 – JAN. 8, 2015 | 15

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C O M M U N I T Y

Resolution Run � ursday, Jan. 1, 10 a.m.-12 p.m.

Start the new year on the right foot at Atlanta Track Club’s Resolution Run 4 Miler, 1 Mile and Kilometer Kids Dash! 4 Miler (ages nine and up), $25; 1 Mile (seven and up), $15; Kilometer Kids Dash (six and under), $10. No head-phones, pets, baby joggers/strollers, roller/inline skates or bicycles. Register online through Dec. 29 at: atlantatrack-club.org. Brookhaven MARTA sta-tion, 4047 Peachtree Rd., Brookhaven, 30319. Questions? Call 404-231-9064 or email: [email protected].

One for the Chipper Saturday, Jan. 3, 9 a.m.-1 p.m.

Area residents can put discarded Christ-mas trees to good use during Keep San-dy Springs’ recycling program, “Bring One for the Chipper.” Remove dec-orations and lights before dropping o� trees. Drop o� at Home Depot, 6400 Peachtree Dunwoody Rd., Sandy Springs, 30328, and also at the Sandy Springs Recycling Center, 470 Morgan Falls Rd., Sandy Springs, 30350. Mulch to be used for playgrounds, public beau-ti� cation projects, wildlife habitat and homeowner landscaping projects. Find out more by visiting: www.knfb.org.

Three Kings DaySunday, Jan. 4, 1-5 p.m. Kick o�

the New Year with the � ree Kings Day Festival, held in collaboration with the Mexican Consulate and the Institu-to de Mexico. Learn about this tradi-tion of our southern neighbors through storytelling, music, live performanc-es, food and activities designed for the entire family. Free admission day. Food and drink available for purchase. Atlanta History Center, 130 W. Paces Ferry Rd., NW, Atlanta, 30305. Call 404-814-4000 or go to: http://AtlantaHistory-Center.com/Family for details.

T H E A R T S

Lily Smernou Friday, Jan. 2, 1-5 p.m. Check

out Lily Smernou’s work at the Sandy Springs Branch Library. Free and open to the public. On display through Jan. 31. Appropriate viewing for all ages. 395 Mount Vernon Highway, Sandy Springs, 30328. Email: [email protected] or call 404-303-6130 for information.

F O R K I D S

Winter Stars Monday, Jan. 5, 11 a.m.-12 p.m.

Are you curious about stars and con-stellations? Have you wanted to know the myths behind our constellations? See nature like you’ve never seen it be-fore inside the Chattahoochee Nature Center’s in� atable planetarium! Take a journey through the night sky viewing stars and locating constellations. Includ-ed with the center’s general admission. 9135 Willeo Rd., Roswell, 30075. Call 770-992-2055 or visit: www.chattnatu-recenter.org for further information.

Film ClassMonday, Jan. 5, 4:30-5:30 p.m.

Join Emmy award winner Michelle Wat-son in this hands-on training that teach-es students the fundamentals of acting, voice over recording, and the creative and technical demands of storytelling with moving pictures. Free. For ages 9-12. Registration required and start-ed Dec. 17. Space is limited. Visit the Sandy Springs Branch Library, call 404-303-6130 or email: [email protected] to sign up or if you have questions.

Tiny TalesTuesday, Jan. 6, 11-11:25 a.m.

Come and enjoy stories, songs and learning activities for infants and tod-dlers. Free and open to the community. Appropriate for ages six to 35 months. In the Story Time Room, Sandy Springs Branch Library, 395 Mount Vernon Highway, Sandy Springs, 30328. Email: [email protected] or call 404-303-6130 for details.

Teen Study TimeWednesday, Jan. 7, 5-6:30 p.m.

Teens in grades 6-12 have priority use of the Buckhead Branch Library’s small conference room. Reserve ahead for a group project or drop in and sign up on a � rst come, � rst served basis. Val-id library card required. Free WiFi avail-able. You may also reserve a librarian to help with research projects. To reserve a librarian, email: [email protected] or call 404-814-3500. 269 Buckhead Ave., NE, Atlanta, 30305.

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Page 16: 12-26-2014 Buckhead Reporter

E D U C A T I O N

16 | DEC. 26, 2014 – JAN. 8, 2015 | www.ReporterNewspapers.net

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senior

Some students spend their summers on pool decks, beaches or phones tex-ting their friends, but North Springs se-nior Summer Robinson had di� erent plans.

During June and July, Summer trav-eled to Ethiopia and Ghana with Black to Our Roots, a two-year program that promotes African cultural values. While there, Summer immersed herself in the culture, she took in the sights and had lively interactions with the people.

“� e trip was really eye opening for me and everyone else; it made me real-ize how sheltered I am living here in the United States,” Summer said.

Each participating student is assigned di� erent tasks for the trip. Summer’s task was to produce a documentary of the group’s trip, highlighting everyone’s experience and re� ections. For Summer, this was the quintessential project, as it aligned with her love for � lm. Her fellow travelers loved her artistic creation. One of the trip advisors, Shevon Myers, was delighted with the � lm. “It was refresh-ing to hear her recount the experiences she had in Africa in such a thought-pro-voking manner, noting the people, plac-es she visited, culture, and societal chal-lenges that in� uenced her perspective of Africa,” Myers said. “As an aspiring � lm-maker, Summer is well on her way to be-coming a leader.”

In preparation for the trip, Summer sought out donors to provide necessi-ties for her host countries. One benefac-tor, Dan Moore, president of the APEX

Museum, which focuses on the appreci-ation of African American history, gave a generous gift for Summer to deliver. In addition, he also gave her a camera, instructing her to take pictures so upon her return so she could write a book de-tailing her expedition to Africa. Moore pushed Summer into � nishing the book, and she says the words fell o� the page easily. “[� e trip] lit a � re in me to be more involved and see all the cultures, so writing the book wasn’t di� cult because it was all from my own knowledge and experience,” Summer said.

Summer has been a member of the track team for the past three years. She is also a member of the Anti Bullying Club and the League Club as well as a sta� member for her school magazine, where she contributes articles and po-ems.

What’s Next: Summer has not yet decided where

she will be attending college next fall, but she hopes to pursue a career as a screenwriter after college.

� is article was written by Amanda Gibson, a student at Holy Innocents’ Epis-copal School.

Do you know a standout high school student? Send nominees to [email protected].

Page 17: 12-26-2014 Buckhead Reporter

P U B L I C S A F E T Y

www.ReporterNewspapers.net | DEC. 26, 2014 – JAN. 8, 2015 | 17

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Cities use ‘urban camping’ to keep homeless off local streets

BY ELLEN [email protected]

Brookhaven Police know Grego-ry Brian Moody well. He has a DeKalb County arrest record going back four years, featuring charges including public drunkenness, carrying an open contain-er of alcohol, soliciting and loitering.

� e day before � anksgiving, Moody was arrested for “urban camping” in Brookhaven, accused of violating an or-dinance the city had adopted in March.

� e city’s urban camping ordinance outlaws the “improper use of public spaces,” including erecting tents or oth-er temporary structures or objects pro-viding shelter; sleeping in a single place for more than one hour at a time; cook-ing or preparing meals; or other simi-lar activities. Similar ordinances exist in Sandy Springs, Dunwoody and Buck-head, which is covered by Atlanta’s or-dinance.

City o� cials say the ordinances keep homeless people from setting up per-manent residences on unused property, but critics say they’re intended to make homeless people disappear.

“� ey are designed to sweep home-less people o� the streets and put them

in jail,” said lawyer Gerry Weber. “� e cost to the taxpayers is signi� cant.”

Weber, then an attorney with the American Civil Liberties Union of Georgia, won a class-action legal chal-lenge in 1997 that led to the revision of the “urban camping” law in Atlanta. He said one of the nine people in the 1997 lawsuit was a college student who failed classes because he was arrested for urban camping and another was an employed homeless person who lost a job after be-ing jailed for urban camping in Atlanta.

He said the way the ordinance was written meant anyone lying down in a public park could be arrested, but only homeless people were being targeted. Weber said these ordinances violate their constitutional rights.

Taking homeless people to jail isn’t what some city o� cials said they mean to do � rst. But that doesn’t always work. “Ultimately, we can’t force [Moody] to seek help from outside resources,” said Carlo Nino, a spokesman for the Brookhaven Police Department.

Nino said Moody’s urban camping

GOOGLE MAPS

Gregory Brian Moody was arrested by Brookhaven police after he was found urban camping near Buford Highway.

CONTINUED ON PAGE 18

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Page 18: 12-26-2014 Buckhead Reporter

P U B L I C S A F E T Y

18 | DEC. 26, 2014 – JAN. 8, 2015 | www.ReporterNewspapers.net

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Cities use ‘urban camping’ to keep homeless off local streets

arrest occurred after the manager of a food store on Buford Highway called police recently after his warnings didn’t deter local homeless people from living on the business’ property.

On Nov. 26, the police o� cer on patrol decided to check the rear of the property behind the store and a gas sta-tion and found violators, including Moody, Nino said. Moody was arrest-ed and charged with urban camping. He spent � anksgiving in jail, before being released on his recognizance on Nov. 28. He could not be located for an interview for this article.

Sandy Springs Mayor Rusty Paul said his previous work as the assistant secretary for the Department of Housing and Urban Development gives him perspective on dealing with the problems asso-ciated with poverty. He said that homelessness is a symptom of a larger problem, so programs should work toward re-solving underlying is-sues of mental illness, addiction or poverty as-sociated with couples who divorce.

“We don’t have the ordinance to put them in jail,” Paul said. “� e � rst thing we try to do is get them to social services. If you can keep them from becoming home-less, that’s a better action.”

When Brookhaven police o� cers � rst encounter homeless people, police urge them to take advantage of resourc-es and shelters in nearby Atlanta, Nino said.

“Urban camping is not a severe prob-lem in Dunwoody,” Dunwoody Police Chief Billy Grogan said. “However, we do have occasions where there are issues, and we deal with each incident based on the speci� c circumstances of each case. For most, we try and refer them to the

appropriate agency or have them move on. Occasionally, we have to make an arrest.”

Dunwoody resident Jenny Carter said she’d prefer her tax dollars go to pro-grams that provide a hand rather than to fund incarcerations. As the direc-

tor of � nance at Dun-woody United Meth-odist Church, Carter said people in need of resources can � nd help, if they ask.

Carter said she wishes government o� cials would learn from agencies such as Family Promise of North Fulton, which she sees as the area’s primary initiative to help the homeless in Dunwoody and Sandy Springs.

“� eir � rst stops are usually to food banks and then, once those folks hear their stories, that’s when they know to refer them to other pro-grams,” Carter said. Dunwoody UMC has a food pantry where anyone can come once a month and pick up a box of food, she said.

“When people come in and ask for help, we want to get them from food to transitional housing to employment,” she said, describing how the cycle of poverty often means su� ering from late fees on rent and utilities that create more debt. “We always wonder if there’s a bet-ter way. It’s a tough cycle. � ey have to miss work to apply for help.”

Urban camping arrests in 2014

Brookhaven: 11Dunwoody: 2Sandy Springs: 5

AngIe PonSELL SANDY SPRINGS404-226-2002

www.isellsandysprings.com

HAPPY HOLIDAYS!

Looking Forward To A Great Year In

Sandy Springs Real Estate In 2015!

Call Me For All Of Your Real Estate Needs!

Gregory Brian Moody

CONTINUED FROM PAGE 17

Page 19: 12-26-2014 Buckhead Reporter

C O M M U N I T Y

www.ReporterNewspapers.net | DEC. 26, 2014 – JAN. 8, 2015 | 19

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From police reports dated Nov. 30 through Dec. 13.

The following information was provided to the Buckhead Reporter by the Zone 2 pre-

cinct of the Atlanta Police Department from its records and is presumed to be accurate.

ROBBERY 3100 block of Pine Heights Drive—

On Dec. 4, two men near a dumpster were approached by two pedestrians. One asked for a cigarette. As the person handed him a cigarette, the man point-ed a gun and demanded the person get on the ground. After the second person started fi ghting back, the two robbers ran off .

3600 block of Peachtree Road—On

Dec. 6, a man pulled a hat and mask over his face before being buzzed into a BP. He then walked up to the register and lifted

his jacket to show he had a handgun. He demanded money from the clerk, saying “I’ve got a family to feed.” He later said

to “hurry up” and “take it nice and slow.” Th e clerk pushed the panic alarm, but the robber left the store with about $300.

AGGRAVATED ASSAULT 2000 block of Bolton Road—On Dec.

5, a father called police after his daugh-ter reported, “Mommy spanked Jonathan with a hanger.” Police noticed bruising on the boy’s back left shoulder blade, chest area, buttocks, forehead and below the right eye. Th e daughter also said in the presence of police that she was “scared to go home” and didn’t want to go back to her mother’s house.

3000 block of Mornington Drive—On Dec. 6, a man was stuck in the face by his wife after they argued in a car. When he got out of the car and started walk-ing, he was stuck by the car from behind. His leg was run over and he complained

of ankle and leg pain. Police noticed in-juries to the man’s face, and say the wom-an refused a fi eld sobriety test and resist-ed arrest.

500 block of Northside Circle—On Dec. 2, two people inside an apartment were involved in a verbal altercation that turned physical over a vehicle battery. One of the people cut the other person’s arm and car tires with a pocketknife.

1100 block of Woodland Avenue—On Dec. 7, a verbal argument turned phys-ical when a man upset about a woman coming to his residence, hit the wom-an in the head with a beer bottle and punched her in the side of the head with a closed fi st. She got away and called 911 from a friend’s apartment. Th e man was gone when police arrived.

Buckhead Police Blotter

CONTINUED ON PAGE 20

BH

Page 20: 12-26-2014 Buckhead Reporter

P U B L I C S A F E T Y

20 | DEC. 26, 2014 – JAN. 8, 2015 | www.ReporterNewspapers.net

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RESIDENTIAL BURGLARY 1100 block of Huff Road—An apart-

ment with damage to its door had its in-terior rummaged through. A Motorola tablet and an Apple laptop were taken. Th e unit next door was also broken into; On Dec. 15, a front door was kicked in and three 42-inch televisions, a blow dry-er, two laptops, a tablet, an iPad mini, four Michael Kors watches, three pairs of designer sunglasses, $6,000 in cash, and a Samsung Galaxy SII phone were taken.

1100 block of Collier Road—On Dec. 2, a rear window was open and a Kentucky Derby ring, iPad, two laptops and fi ve pairs of black shoes were taken.

100 block of Maribeau Square—On Dec. 2, a base-ment door was forced open and a night stand was rummaged through. Th e resident is out of town and could not tell police what was taken.

100 block of La Rue—On Dec. 2, a glass basement door was broken. No one entered and nothing was taken.

100 block of Iron Bound—On Dec. 4, someone walked in and took multiple Chase Bank fi nancial documents from the resident’s bedroom.

2200 block of Peachtree—Th e resident returned from an extended time away and found a chest in the bedroom had been opened and rummaged through. Several pieces of jewelry were taken.

500 block of Northside Circle—On Nov. 30, a rear door was kicked in and two guitars, a MacBook Pro laptop and a NPC music mixer were taken.

1100 block of Peachtree Park Drive—A sliding glass door in the rear of an apartment was discovered open and un-locked. An iPad, three MacBooks, a Mac-Book Pro laptop, Wii, PlayStation 4, mu-sic equipment and a Canon camera were taken.

1000 block of Peachtree Park Drive—On Dec. 5, the resident discovered the front door cracked open and a 15-inch MacBook Pro, and Apple iPad and a 13-inch MacBook were taken.

4300 block of Peachtree Park Drive—On Dec. 6, a MacBook and a charger were taken from an apartment.

3600 block of Habersham Road—On Dec. 3, damage to the wood over a dead-bolt was discovered and a 52-inch Sam-sung television, an iPad and $200 in

coins were taken.

3400 block of Rockhaven Circle—On Dec. 2, a bedroom window was unlocked and an HP Elite book, a Emerson 22-inch fl at screen TV, several power tools, Samsung 36-inch fl at screen TV, a pair of Maui Jim sunglasses and a Toshiba 40-inch fl at screen TV were taken.

2300 block of Parkland Drive—On Dec. 5, the door frame was damaged

and a MacBook Pro laptop and charger were taken; On Dec. 6, a second apartment was target-ed, where the peep hole, door knocker and deadbolt were

damaged. No one entered and nothing was taken.

2100 block of Piedmont Road—Pry marks were noticed near the deadbolt on the front door. An Xbox One, PS4, 70-inch TV, a 50-inch TV and an Apple MacBook laptop were taken.

3000 block of Howell Mill Road—On Dec. 14, a front door was

kicked in and an Apple computer was taken.

2300 block of Pine Grove Drive—On Dec. 17, a rear door was damaged an a Samsung TV, Acer computer, Christmas gifts, antique earrings and other jewelry was taken.

1900 block of Hollywood Road—On Dec. 15, a rear window was broken and a rock was found lying on the bedroom fl oor. Food and clothes were taken.

300 block of Whitmore Drive—On Dec. 14, a side door was kicked in and two televisions, an iPad, a Kindle, a Mi-chael Kors Tortoise watch, a pair of pearl stud earrings, and a pearl tear drop ear-ring with loop of gold diamonds and some jewelry had been taken.

1500 block of Tallulah Street—Th ree toilets and a vanity were removed from a residence under construction.

200 block of 26th Street—On Dec. 17, a deadbolt was punched off and the door-frame was cracked. A MacBook Pro and charger were taken.

3500 block of Piedmont Road—On Dec. 15, a door was kicked in and a MacBook, prescription glasses, an iPhone, Bank of America checkbook and a Louis Vuitton wallet with $500 were taken.

900 block of Canterbury Road—A rock was used to break a side window and an HP notebook and a pair of Nike run-ning shoes were taken.

Buckhead Police BlotterCONTINUED FROM PAGE 19

BH

Page 21: 12-26-2014 Buckhead Reporter

www.ReporterNewspapers.net | DEC. 26, 2014 – JAN. 8, 2015 | 21

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Galloway School Garage Dude, � e Gas South George’s Restaurant & Bar Georgia Blinds & Interiors Georgia Perimeter College Georgia Urology Gi� y Nibo Goddard School Good Measure Meals Goodchild for Georgia Gordon Street Realty Gravity Studio Great Clips Great Gatsby’s Fine Antiques Greek Orthodox Cathedral Green� eld Hebrew Academy Gunnison Tree Specialists HammerSmith Hammocks Trad-ing Company Hammond Glen Senior Community Hands You Demand Harry Norman Buckhead - Hil Harper Harry Norman Buckhead North- Bob Glascock Harry Norman Intown-Rodney Hinote Harry Norman Intown - Chris Hough Team Harry Norman Perimeter - Peggy Feldman Harry Norman Realtors - Carolyn Calloway Harry Norman Realtors - Travis Reed Haygood Preschool High Meadows School Highland Pet Supply Hindson & Melton Hitch House Holy Innocents Episcopal School Holy Spirit Preparatory School Home Care Assistance Home Rebuilders Home-stead Real Estate Consultants Howard School, � e ID Tech Camps In Stitches InShapeMD Insidesign Intaglia Home Collection Integral Structure Inter Atlanta FC Janke Glass Studio Jewish National Fund � e Joint Junior League of Atlanta-Nearly New Kaikudo Martial Arts Academy Kazoo Toys Keller Williams-Angie Ponsell Keller Williams - Alex Wilkinson Keller Williams - Gipson Team Keller Williams - Kelly Marsh Keller Williams - Schi� Realty Partners Kevin Aycock Homes Kids Enabled Kudzu Antiques & Vintage Home Mkt LaAmistad Landmark Vacation Rentals %Prior-ity Mkt Las Margaritas Little Da Vinci International School Little Szechuan Los Bravos Mexican Restaurant Lovett School Lucky’s Burger & Brew Lutheran Church of the Redeemer Marcus Jewish Community Center Marcus L Dorsey Marist School W Atlanta Downtown MARTA Maryville College Massage Envy Spa Maxim Maylan International Academy MBS Wellness McDaniel & Durrett, PC Gynecology McKenna Long & Aldridge Medlock Gulf MedZed Mercedes-Benz of Buckhead Merlin Auto Group Merry Maids 1185 Michael Smith Midtown Bank MJCCA Moda Floors Modern Atlanta Modern Dental Modern Emergent Care Moksha Indian Cuisine Moon Bros., Inc Mosaic Group Atlanta Mount Vernon Presbyte-rian School Mt. Bethel Christian Academy Murphey Candler Girls So� ball Assoc Museum of Design Atlanta (MODA) Myers Carpet Nancy’s Pizza Midtown Nancy G’s Neuropathy Center of Georgia Nightvision Outdoor Lighting North Atlanta Primary Care North Atlanta Women’s Specialists North Springs Charter High School Northside Drive Baptist Church Northside Hospital Northside Hospital Physicians Northside Oral Surgery Northwest Presbyterian Church Nothing Bundt Cakes Nu Ear Hearing Centers Olansky Dermatology Assoc Oriental Designer rugs Osteria 832 - Pasta and Pizza Our Lady of the Assumption School Pace Academy Paideia School Palmer House Properties & Associates Paolo’s Gelato Italiano Park Springs LLC Parkside Parlor Blowout Parkside Partners Peachtree Cremation Peachtree Presbyterian Church Peachtree Road UMC Perdue for Senate Peregrine’s Landing at Peachtree Creek Perimeter Clinic Perimeter Institute for Clinical Research Piedmont Healthcare %Tail� n PNC Bank Price for Congress Primrose School Midtown Primrose School of Brookhaven Priority Marketing Proactive Residential Red Baron’s Antiques Red-ding Allergy & Asthma Center ReMax Around Atlanta ReMax Metro Atlanta Cityside ReMax Metro Cityside / � e Intowners ReMax Town & Country Renaissance on Peachtree Rialto Center for the Arts Richmond Tree Experts Riverside Military Academy Riverview Camp for Girls Robb Pitts Campaign RuSan’s S & S Rugs Saint Anne’s Terrace Inc Sandy Springs Hospitality & Tourism Sandy Springs UMC Sandy Weider Sanford Brown Savage Pizza Scholarship Basics Second Church of Christ, Scientist Second Ponce De Leon Baptist Sembler Company Sewell Appliance She� rin Men’s Health Signature Bank. Silk Route Simple Finds Interiors & Antiques SKIRT Slice of Brookhaven Smiles By Design Snow Companies Sophia Academy Southcare Cremation & Funeral Society Southeastern Lung Care Southern Classic Jewelry Southern Outdoor Construction Spivey Hall - Clayton State University Sports Broadcasting Camp Springmont School Spruill Center For � e Arts SRA International, Inc SSYS St James United Methodist St. Benedict’s Episcopal Day School St. John Children’s Center St. John United Methodist Church St. Jude the Apostle Catholic Church St. Luke Lutheran Church St. Martin’s Episcopal School St. Pius X Mother’s Club State Farm-Jerome Johnson State Farm-Harold Florence Steel Canyon Golf Club Su� ’s Restaurant Suzuki School Sweet Repeats Swi� School Sylvan Learning Center Tacos and Tequilas Target Auction Teela Taqueria Temple Emanu-El Schi� Preschool Ten � ousand Villages Tenet Health/Atlanta Medical Center Tennessee Valley Railroad � e Haute Spot � e Pet

We’re celebrating another year of growth!More advertisersMore circulationMore local stories

We want to take this opportunity to say “THANK YOU” to the nearly 500 advertisers who helped to make 2014 our biggest year ever. Please shop local and patronize them when you’re looking for high quality products and services.

Our advertisers choose Reporter Newspapers and Atlanta Intown because we reach more homes and cover more news in our five communities than any other local publication. We’re proud to be your newspaper and look forward to another year of growing the local ties that matter most to our customers and readers alike.

lanta Gymnastics Center Atlanta Hawks Atlanta Hearing Associates Atlanta International School Atlanta Jewish Academy Atlanta Peach Movers Atlanta Renovation Store Atlanta Roof Cleaners Atlanta Speech School Atlanta Surgical Arts Atlanta Technical College Atlanta Track Club Atlanta Women’s Obstetrics & Gynecology Atlantic Realty Partners Atlantis Granite & Marble Audiological Consultants of Atlanta Babcock Dermatology Baker Dennard & Goetz Bank of North Georgia - Alpharetta Bank of Sandy Springs Bare Foot Barnsley Resort Batteries + Bulbs Beacham & Co - Baker Dennard & Goetz Bank of North Georgia - Alpharetta Bank of Sandy Springs Bare Foot Barnsley Resort Batteries + Bulbs Beacham & Co - Donna Boynton & Joy Myrick Beacham & Company - Buckhead O� ce Beacham & Company Realtors - Anne Powers Becky Whetzell Bell Carpet Galleries BenchMark Physical � erapy Berkshire Hathaway HomeServices Beverly Bremer Silver Shop Big Ketch Big Ring Media / Sharian Rugs Binders Art Bird Law Firm Bird Loechl Brittain & McCants LLC Blue Ridge Mountain Recovery Center BNARR LLC Bob Gibeling Bob Montigel Booth Western Art Museum Brandon Hall School Break Into Business Briarcli� Animal Center Brookdale Senior Living Brookhaven Alerts Brookhaven Baptist Church Brookhaven Dental Associates BuckHaven Veterinary Clinic LLC Buckhead Fine Rugs Camelot Jewelers Camp Chatu-

lanta Gymnastics Center Atlanta Hawks Atlanta Hearing Associates Atlanta International School Atlanta Jewish Academy Atlanta Peach Movers Atlanta Renovation Store Atlanta Roof Cleaners Atlanta Speech School Atlanta Surgical Arts Atlanta Technical College Atlanta Track Club Atlanta Women’s Obstetrics & Gynecology Atlantic Realty Partners Atlantis Granite & Marble Audiological Consultants of Atlanta Babcock Dermatology Baker Dennard & Goetz Bank of North Georgia - Alpharetta Bank of Sandy Springs Bare Foot Barnsley Resort Batteries + Bulbs Beacham & Co - Donna Boynton & Joy Myrick Beacham & Company - Buckhead O� ce Beacham & Company Realtors - Anne Powers Becky Whetzell Bell Carpet Galleries BenchMark Physical � erapy Berkshire Hathaway HomeServices Beverly Bremer Silver Shop Big Ketch Big Ring Media / Sharian Rugs Binders Art Bird Law Firm Bird Loechl Brittain & McCants LLC Blue Ridge Mountain Recovery Center BNARR LLC Bob Gibeling Bob Montigel Booth Western Art Museum Brandon Hall School Break Into Business Briarcli� Animal Center Brookdale Senior Living Brookhaven Alerts Brookhaven Baptist Church Brookhaven Dental Associates BuckHaven Veterinary Clinic LLC Buckhead Fine Rugs Camelot Jewelers Camp Chatu-ga Camp � underbird Camp Westminster Canterbury Court Caring Transitions Carlisle Montessori Cathedral of St. Philips Bookstore Center for Civil & Human Rights Central Atlanta Progress Central Presbyterian Church Chastain Horse Park Cheeseburger Bobby’s Cheeseburger Bobby’s -Chastain Children’s Healthcare -� ree Children’s School Chin Chin Restaurant Christopher Burton MD Chrysalis Exp Academy Church of the Atonement Chyten Premier Tutoring & Test Prep City of Brookhaven O� ce of Tourism City of Decatur City of Decatur City of Sandy Springs Clairmont Baptist Church Club Z Intown Cobb County Gem & Mineral Society Cobblestone Capital LLC Coldwell Banker-Robin Blass Coldwell Banker Corporate Coldwell Banker High Country Realty Coldwell Banker Intown Coldwell Banker Res- Midtown Comfortable Chair Store Cres-cent Heights - � e Atlantic Condos Cruise Authority, � e Cumberland Academy Cutco Dance � eatre Davis Academy Dentistry with a Di� erence Doc Chey’s Noodle House Dorsey Alston Realtors Dorsey Alston Realtors - Erin Yabroudy Dr. Arthur Silver DDS, PC Dunwoody Brokers Realty Dunwoody Nature Center Dunwoody Photo Dunwoody Pines Dunwoody Preservation Trust Dunwoody Veterinary Center Eighteen Eight Fine

who helped to make 2014 our biggest year ever. Banker Corporate Coldwell Banker High Country Realty Coldwell Banker Intown Coldwell Banker Res- Midtown Comfortable Chair Store Cres-

who helped to make 2014 our biggest year ever. Banker Corporate Coldwell Banker High Country Realty Coldwell Banker Intown Coldwell Banker Res- Midtown Comfortable Chair Store Cres-cent Heights - � e Atlantic Condos Cruise Authority, � e Cumberland Academy Cutco Dance � eatre Davis Academy Dentistry with a Di� erence who helped to make 2014 our biggest year ever. cent Heights - � e Atlantic Condos Cruise Authority, � e Cumberland Academy Cutco Dance � eatre Davis Academy Dentistry with a Di� erence Doc Chey’s Noodle House Dorsey Alston Realtors Dorsey Alston Realtors - Erin Yabroudy Dr. Arthur Silver DDS, PC Dunwoody Brokers Realty

who helped to make 2014 our biggest year ever. Doc Chey’s Noodle House Dorsey Alston Realtors Dorsey Alston Realtors - Erin Yabroudy Dr. Arthur Silver DDS, PC Dunwoody Brokers Realty

Toys Keller Williams-Angie Ponsell Keller Williams - Alex Wilkinson Keller Williams - Gipson Team Keller Williams - Kelly Marsh Keller Williams - Schi� Realty Partners Kevin Aycock Homes Kids Enabled Kudzu Antiques & Vintage Home Mkt LaAmistad Landmark Vacation Rentals %Prior-ity Mkt Las Margaritas Little Da Vinci International School Little Szechuan Los Bravos Mexican Restaurant Lovett School Lucky’s Burger & Brew Lutheran Church of the Redeemer Marcus Jewish Community Center Marcus L Dorsey Marist School W Atlanta Downtown MARTA Maryville College Massage Envy Spa Maxim Maylan International Academy MBS Wellness McDaniel & Durrett, PC Gynecology McKenna Long & Aldridge Medlock Gulf MedZed Mercedes-Benz of Buckhead Merlin Auto Group Merry Maids 1185 Michael Smith Midtown Bank MJCCA Moda Floors Modern Atlanta Modern Dental Modern Emergent Care Moksha Indian Cuisine Moon Bros., Inc Mosaic Group Atlanta Mount Vernon Presbyte-rian School Mt. Bethel Christian Academy Murphey Candler Girls So� ball Assoc Museum of Design Atlanta (MODA) Myers Carpet Nancy’s Pizza Midtown Nancy G’s Neuropathy Center of Georgia Nightvision Outdoor Lighting North Atlanta Primary Care North Atlanta Women’s Specialists North Springs Charter High School Northside Drive Baptist Church Northside Hospital Northside Hospital Physicians Northside Oral Surgery Northwest Presbyterian Church Nothing Bundt Cakes Nu Ear Hearing Centers Olansky Dermatology Assoc Oriental Designer rugs Osteria 832 - Pasta and Pizza Our Lady of the Assumption School Pace Academy Paideia School Palmer House Properties & Associates Paolo’s Gelato Italiano Park Springs LLC Parkside Parlor Blowout Parkside Partners Peachtree Cremation Peachtree Presbyterian Church Peachtree Road UMC Perdue for Senate Peregrine’s Landing at Peachtree Creek Perimeter Clinic Perimeter Institute for Clinical Research Piedmont Healthcare %Tail� n PNC Bank Price for Congress Primrose School Midtown Primrose School of Brookhaven Priority Marketing Proactive Residential Red Baron’s Antiques Red-ding Allergy & Asthma Center ReMax Around Atlanta ReMax Metro Atlanta Cityside ReMax Metro Cityside / � e Intowners ReMax Town & Country Renaissance on Peachtree Rialto Center for the Arts Richmond Tree Experts Riverside Military Academy Riverview Camp for Girls Robb Pitts Campaign RuSan’s S & S Rugs Saint Anne’s Terrace Inc Sandy Springs Hospitality & Tourism Sandy Springs UMC Sandy Weider Sanford Brown Savage Pizza Scholarship Basics Second Church of Christ, Scientist Second Ponce De Leon Baptist Sembler Company Sewell Appliance She� rin Men’s Health Signature Bank. Silk Route Simple Finds Interiors & Antiques SKIRT Slice of Brookhaven Smiles By Design Snow Companies Sophia Academy Southcare Cremation & Funeral Society Southeastern Lung Care Southern Classic Jewelry Southern Outdoor Construction Spivey Hall - Clayton State University Sports Broadcasting Camp Springmont School Spruill Center For � e Arts SRA International, Inc SSYS St James United Methodist St. Benedict’s Episcopal Day School St. John Children’s Center St. John United Methodist Church St. Jude the Apostle Catholic Church St. Luke Lutheran Church St. Martin’s Episcopal School St. Pius X Mother’s Club State Farm-Jerome Johnson State Farm-Harold Florence Steel Canyon Golf Club Su� ’s Restaurant Suzuki School Sweet Repeats Swi� School Sylvan Learning Center Tacos and Tequilas Target Auction Teela Taqueria Temple Emanu-El Schi� Preschool Ten � ousand Villages Tenet Health/Atlanta Medical Center Tennessee Valley Railroad � e Haute Spot � e Pet

BuckheadReporter

BrookhavenReporter

DunwoodyReporter

Sandy SpringsReporter

www.ReporterNewspapers.net • www.AtlantaINtownPaper.com • PUBLISHED BY SPRINGS PUBLISHING LLC

Thank you from the Reporter Newspapers and Atlanta INtown staff!

BH

Page 22: 12-26-2014 Buckhead Reporter

22 | DEC. 26, 2014 – JAN. 8, 2015 | www.ReporterNewspapers.net

1837 CORPORATE BLVD., N.E. • ATLANTA, GA 30329 • 404-634-6396I-85, EXIT 89, NORTH DRUID HILLS/RIGHT ON BUFORD HWY./NEXT RIGHT

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yesnew yearsyesnew years

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daydayDOORS OPEN @ 4PM

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UNTIL 7PMCIROC, GREY GOOSE, PATRON,

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THANKS FOR MAKING 2014 SUCH A GREAT YEAR!

PP_NewYears_Ad.indd 1 12/22/14 7:05 PMBH

Page 23: 12-26-2014 Buckhead Reporter

www.ReporterNewspapers.net | DEC. 26, 2014 – JAN. 8, 2015 | 23

Reporter Classifi eds & Home Services Directory

To Advertise, call404-917-2200 ext 110

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P E TS E R V I C E S

D I R E C T O R YAdvertising Sales - Reporter Newspapers & Atlanta Intown – Join our team! You should have a record of success selling products or services to small and mid-sized businesses, know the local market and enjoy working in a fast-paced, deadline oriented, entrepreneurial company. Unlimited earning potential with base salary + commission + company paid health insurance. Contact Publisher: Steve Levene at 404-917-2200 ext. 111. or email [email protected].

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VCA Pets Are People Too4280 N. Peachtree RdChamblee,GA 30341

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Driveways & Walkways – Replaced or repaired. Masonry, grading, foundations repaired, waterproofi ng and retaining walls. Call Joe Sullivan 770-616-0576.

SERVICES AVAILABLE

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Sandy Springs Police Department – Seeking owners for Lost and Found Property. These property items are not for sale. To view the property items list, visit the Sandy Springs Police Department website at http://www.sandyspringsga.gov/publ ic-safety/pol ice-department/citizen-services/property-evidence-retrieval. To claim property, you must have valid identifi cation and proof of ownership.

POLICE DEPARTMENTLOST & FOUND PROPERTY

WINDOWS & SIDINGOffering vinyl, wood and composite windows – All types of siding. Factory-trained installation. Family-owned, Family-priced. Angie’s List ‘A’ Rated. BBB ‘A+’. 33 Years In Business. Quinn Windows & Siding. 770-939-5634.

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Part-time Personal Assistant Wanted (Intown) – Looking for an organized, self starter person to assist in local work related activities. Duties could entail offi ce work, bill paying, fi ling, errands and miscellaneous responsibilities. Hours can be fl exible and may vary. Fax resume to 404-478-8465.

We have an immediate opening for drivers – Do you love to drive and make money? Are you organized, dependable, honest and hardworking? Then let’s make money. OTR drivers needed - located in Atlanta GA. Minimum 2 years verifi able O.T.R Truck driving experience. If you have any questions call or text – Adam 614-787-7208.

BH

Page 24: 12-26-2014 Buckhead Reporter

24 | DEC. 26, 2014 – JAN. 8, 2015 | www.ReporterNewspapers.net

connect with:

Schiff Real Estate TeamOffice: 404.419.3500Direct: 404.418.9105info@SchiffRealEstateTeam.comwww.SchiffRealEstateTeam.com

Keller Williams Realty Peachtree Road804 Town Blvd., Suite A2040 Atlanta, GA 30319

©2014 SRP. All information deemed reliable but not guaranteed. Each office is independently owned & operated. Michael & Leigh Schiff

IMAGINE THE DREAMWe’ll take you there

from the Schiff Real estate Team

HAPPY NEW YEAR& warm wishes this

holiday season

BH