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The Big Picture: Rethinking Dyslexia

Movie presentation of The Big Picture: Rethinking Dyslexia

The Big Picture: Rethinking Dyslexia provides personal and uplifting accounts of the dyslexic experience from children, experts and iconic leaders, such as Sir Richard Branson and financier Charles Schwab. Directed by James Redford, the film not only clears up the misconceptions about the condition, but also paints a picture of hope for all who struggle with it. Shining a spotlight on the latest scientific and psychological research, the film also highlights the work of Drs. Sally and Bennett Shaywitz, co-founders and co-directors of the Yale Center of Dyslexia and Creativity to illuminate the hidden origins and implications of dyslexia. Proving that dyslexia is a neurological issue and not a character flaw, The Big Picture beautifully illustrates that while the condition is an obstacle, it also carries some unique advantages, and ultimately can be overcome.

Date:
November 14, 2013 at 7:30 pm

Admission:
$12

Address:
GTC Merchant’s Walk Stadium Cinemas 14
1301 Johnson Ferry Rd
Marietta, GA, 30068

Parking:
plenty of free parking

For more information, please call (678) 560-1111 or visit http://www.tugg.com/events/5882

Habitat Road Race

20th Annual Habitat Road Race – 5K, 5K relay, 1 mile and Tot Trot. The proceeds from the race will be used to build Mt. Bethel’s 33rd Habitat for Humanity house.

USATF certification (Peachtree qualifier), chip timing and silent auction.

Post-Race Celebration: Refreshments, Concert by The Cottrells, food, vendor exhibits, amusements for kids … fun for the entire family!

For more information, please call Pam Skelton at (770) 971-6657 or visit www.HabitatRoadRace.com, www.facebook.com/habitatroadrace or twitter@HabitatRoadRace

Date:
October 5, 2013 at 8:00 AM

Admission:
$20 by October 1, 2013
$25 after October 1, 2013

Address:
Mt. Bethel UMC
4385 Lower Roswell Road
Marietta, GA 30068

Parking:
Parking onsite at Mt. Bethel UMC

For more information, please call (770) 971-6657

Cobb EMC: Illuminating 75 Years

cobb-emc-75-yearsWhile the North Georgia State Fair has been going strong for 81 years, this year another Cobb institution, Cobb EMC, is celebrating 75 years of its own. To mark such a historic year, Cobb EMC is holding its annual meeting at the North Georgia State Fair, promising a fun-filled day for Cobb EMC employees and their families. After the annual meeting wraps up in the arena, all attendees and their families will get their hands stamped to enjoy unlimited rides inside the park.

“For our 75th anniversary, we wanted to have a meeting with a carnival-like atmosphere,” says Mark Justice, associate vice president of education and community relations for Cobb EMC. “In the past, we’ve always had our meetings at Cobb EMC, but with 8,000 members, we really couldn’t have this celebration on site. The fair gives us a lot more room and it’s such a great, family-friendly place to meet.” Although the agenda for the company meeting has yet to be set, the morning will start at 9:30 with a performance by singers from Dodgen Middle School, and part of the day will be spent listening to Youth Tour delegates relate experiences from their recent trip to Washington, D.C.

Cobb EMC’s decision to celebrate at the fair is particularly fitting because all the glittering sights and sounds would be impossible without the steady, silent hum of Cobb EMC power. “I think this anniversary is very exciting for the community because there was a time when Cobb County was so rural, there was no electricity,” says Justice. “In the days leading up to the creation of Cobb EMC, the county was covered with farms and you could drive for miles and miles without seeing a single light.”

Though Edison’s great discovery had illuminated nearly every major city in the nation, 50 years after the invention of the light bulb, most rural areas remained in darkness because it was too expensive to run lines to the country’s most remote and under-populated areas. In a movement that became known as “the quiet revolution,” in 1935 the Rural Electric Administration enabled EMCs to empower their own communities by bringing electricity directly to their citizens.

As the quiet revolution hummed along, kerosene lamps and fireplaces gave way to washing machines, refrigerators and radios, which fueled the transformation of Cobb County’s farmland into booming suburban communities filled with top-rated schools, Fortune 500 companies and mammoth entertainment complexes. “On Dec. 17, 1938, Sen. Richard B. Russell flicked the switch to energize our lines and began the modernization effort that we now take for granted,” says Justice. “It was such a symbolic day because those first lines were really energized that day. Electricity is very much a necessity now, but when we began Cobb EMC was providing energy to 489 homes and 14 businesses. Today we have more than 177,000 members and many more meters.”

In celebration of the company’s 75 years in business, Cobb EMC designed a special 75th anniversary logo and has posted memorabilia and historic documents on its company Facebook page. There, interested consumers can find original documents about the electrification process, as well as historic newspaper clippings about how electrification progressed throughout the county. Cobb EMC will unveil additional documents and special events throughout the year as the company counts down to its anniversary on Dec. 17. “We are proud to have served our members for so many years and we look forward to the annual meeting at the North Georgia State Fair,” says Justice. “The venue is going to be a great, family-friendly place to have our meeting and we hope to have a great turnout.”

Keeping the Arts Alive in Cobb

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The arts in Cobb County are growing immensely due to the host of museums, performances, festivals and concerts available in the area. Whether you’re passionate about dance, music or visual arts, local organizations are providing opportunities for people of all ages to develop their artistic abilities, all while staying local.

Shall We Dance?

The Georgia Ballet is committed to inspiring the students of Cobb County by teaching them to appreciate the art of dance. The organization is three-fold—encompassing a dance school, professional company and community outreach program. Now under new leadership, the ballet is offering more dance classes and expanding its performance season this year. “In the past we have had three professional performances, but this year we are looking to do five or six,” says Keri Toggerson, marketing associate for the Georgia Ballet.

Outside the Georgia Ballet’s dance school and live performances, the organization gives back to the community through its Arts in Education programs. The ballet offers field trip opportunities where Cobb County schools, as well as home school groups, can enjoy special daytime performances. “We make up a study guide for the performance that we send to the teachers beforehand to get students involved and so the teachers can learn more about the ballet as well,” says Toggerson.

The organization also offers a program for local Title I elementary schools called Momentum, giving underprivileged children the chance to learn the basics of dance training. “We do a six- to 12-week program, and the kids go to dance during physical education class once or twice a week,” Toggerson says. Kids in the Momentum program are also offered admission to the Georgia Ballet’s summer classes free of charge if they wish to continue their study of dance.

The final component of Arts in Education is the Dance-Ability program, a fully-funded dance class for special needs children. “It is for students who may not be able to perform in a traditional dance class,” Toggerson says. “We provide uniforms and ballet shoes, and we have a multitude of volunteers to help.” The ballet tries to pair each student with a volunteer and tailor the class so everyone can participate. This program is especially close to Toggerson’s heart, as she herself is a volunteer. Her student, Courtney, was diagnosed with a brain tumor four years ago. Today, at age 12, Courtney is in remission and has used dance to further improve her motor skills and cognitive function. “She came in a few years ago in a wheelchair, and now she walks through the door,” Toggerson says.

Strike up the Band

keeping-arts-alive-in-cobb-six-flagsSeveral events are happening across Cobb County to give local musicians the opportunity to showcase their talents. At Six Flags Over Georgia, musicians can perform in the amusement park through its Live and Local concerts. These concerts are performed daily for Six Flags patrons and are included in the price of admission. “It’s a way for the bands to get their face and name out there to the thousands of people at the park on any given day,” says Emily Murray, communications manager at Six Flags.

Another Cobb County event is helping to showcase local musicians of a very specific genre—smooth jazz. The 6th annual Atlanta Smooth Music Festival is on Sept. 14 from 1:30–9:30 p.m. at the Mable House Barnes Amphitheatre. “Since the demise of the jazz radio station, it has become increasing difficult to keep this genre alive,” says Joe Cleveland, managing partner of Jazz Grooves, LLC and promoter of the festival. “We are dedicated to bringing live music and performance arts to our community to support the improvement of the arts.”

The festival opens with local jazz artists, moving into national and international talent as the day progresses. “We always open with the local artists in an attempt to provide them with a little more exposure than they get every day playing at the smaller clubs throughout the area,” Cleveland says.

In addition to great music, guests can browse the marketplace and patronize local vendors, who will be selling items including food, clothing, jewelry and art. After each performance, the artists will also head to the marketplace to sign autographs and take pictures with fans.

Cleveland believes it is important for aspiring musicians to hear good jazz music through showcases like the Atlanta Smooth Music Festival. “To do a live performance, you have to be an accomplished musician,” he says. “But before you become accomplished, you have to be a student and learn not only the process and environment, but the particular instrument you are going to play.”

State of the Arts

With a multitude of exhibits, festivals and museums, the visual arts are also thriving in Cobb County. Helping to lead the art movement is the Marietta/Cobb Museum of Art. “The MCMA’s mission is to inspire and educate a diverse community through the exhibition, interpretation, collection and presentation of works of American art,” says Sally Macaulay, executive director of the museum.

The MCMA hosts several events throughout the year to bring patrons into the museum. Martinis and Music occurs four times a year where guests can enjoy live music and light refreshments, all while viewing the gallery’s art.

Under the direction of MCMA’s education director Katie Bush, the museum has also expanded its education programs. “With our new education program, we brought back summer art camps, expanded our art classes and introduced the Traveling Trunk program, where we go to different schools in Cobb County and take art to the classroom,” says Macaulay. “We also started a sensorial art program for children with sensory problems.”

Macaulay is passionate about supporting the arts—and has read the statistics to prove its importance. “I recently graduated from Art Leaders of Atlanta, where I learned that, statistically, children score better on achievement tests and SATs if they are exposed to the arts,” she says. “Also, the economic development of a city is greatly enhanced by having a variety of arts in the community.”

In addition to all the MCMA has to offer, plenty of other events are promoting the arts in Cobb as well. The Cobb Arts Ball is an annual event hosted by the United Arts of Cobb. This year, the event will be held on Oct. 26 at the Renaissance Waverly Hotel in Marietta with an old Hollywood glamour theme. “When I first signed on to help with the ball three years ago, it was just a regular ball,” says MaryClarie Andres, a special event producer in Cobb. “I wanted to make it very unique and bring in a lot of the arts. We started having a costume theme each year, paintings on site and performances from the different organizations and volunteers.”

Andres is also helping to promote a new event in the area. “I am working currently with a company that is putting on a hot air balloon festival at Kennesaw State University,” she says. “We will be having an artist market where people can come and debut their work and have it on display to sell.” The festival, where glowing balloons will take flight as a different take on a traditional art form, will take place on the evenings of Oct. 26 and 27.

“In my opinion, keeping the arts alive is keeping your community alive,” Andres says. “We have had a lot more galleries open up on the Marietta Square, and I think that’s wonderful. The fact that there are artists moving their work to Marietta says a lot for where the future of arts is going in Cobb County.”

Cobb’s Financial Institutions

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It’s no secret that business is strong in Cobb County. Home to several Fortune 500 corporate offices and headquarters including The Home Depot, Genuine Parts Company, Lockheed Martin and GE, big businesses have taken advantage of all that the metro area has to offer. But it’s not only the big dogs who benefit from living and working in Cobb: According to the Kauffman Foundation, in 2012, Georgia had the highest entrepreneurial activity as well as the largest increase in entrepreneurial activity. NerdWallet also voted Atlanta the No. 1 spot on their “Best Cities to Start a Business” list, which debuted in April.

For businesses to thrive they must have equally strong financing options, and Cobb’s banks and credit unions work to provide local businesses with the best services to facilitate success. When it comes to starting and remaining a successful business, there are many variables to consider, and from loans and deposit accounts to merchant services and even business plans, Cobb’s financial institutions have you covered.

In the Beginning

According to Rodney Grizzle, assistant vice president of member business lending at LGE Community Credit Union, being appropriately capitalized during the first three years of operation is key for growing—or beginning—a company. A common misconception in recent years is that loans are harder to get in today’s economy, but as long as you approach a lender with a solid business plan and a strong understanding of what it takes to run a business in your field, you’re on the right track.

“There is no price tag that can be placed on the value of having a well-written business plan,” says LGE Retail Business Analyst Heather Bedell. “It will not only help you as the business owner to develop and focus your own energy, but a well-written plan will communicate your vision to others in the financial world who can help your business succeed by meeting its goals along the way.”

Each customer will have their own unique needs and financial hurdles to overcome, and James Pope, president and CEO of KeyWorth Bank, advises them to turn to their banker. “We encourage any applicant to put together a three-year business plan and present that to the banker and let them review it,” he says. “If there are banking services needed, whether it be deposit accounts or loans, then we will work with the borrower to structure and design those kinds of products that will help them with their business venture. I think a good plan is the start.”

Options for Small Businesses

The financial services industry is evolving, which is creating more innovative options tailor-made for small businesses, according to Grizzle. “Small businesses should talk to their lenders or the financial institutions to learn about all the financial tools available to them, and then select only those that will meet their specific needs and make sense for their business,” he says. “Some options may include traditional lines of credit, commercial mortgages and short-term installment loans.”

Small Business Association (SBA) loans provide attractive options for small business owners and remain an avenue most bankers recommend to all their business customers. For example, if a project is $1 million, the borrower is required to put down 10 percent and they can finance 90 percent, which is divided such that 50 percent is done by the bank and 40 is done by the SBA. This is great for both bank and borrower and gives attractive terms without requiring borrowers to put a large amount of money down.

Of course, not every type of business or business owner will need the same type of loan, and several other options exist to fit individual needs. “The 7A is not an SBA-funded loan, but a guaranteed loan,” explains Pope. “The bank makes the loan and the SBA guarantees generally 75 percent of any loss, should the loan incur a loss. Those are very attractive especially when the borrower is starting out or is a little weaker financially than the traditional underwriting that the bank would want. The guarantee of the SBA helps to mitigate some of that financial weakness and would enable the bank to do a loan that they otherwise might not be able to do.”

In addition to the SBA 7A and 504 programs, “There is also a similar program through the Georgia Department of Community Affairs that is administered very well but it is subject to eligibility of the local community,” says Mike Henderson, senior vice president and president of the Cobb division at Metro Bank. “We have had very good results with both.” He adds that underwriting departments look at cash flow and long-term payment abilities, so having good financial reporting allows everything to go smoothly.

Preparing Financially

For new and aspiring entrepreneurs, starting a business requires a lot of preparation. Everything from your personal finances to contingency plans must be taken into consideration. “A good personal credit history is a must,” says Terri Guthrie, chief lending officer of First Landmark Bank. “Even though you may be looking for a business loan, banks will look at your personal financial reputation and habits in conjunction with your business plan and company financials.” She also advises new business owners to be prepared for cash up-front requirements and to personally guarantee any loans you may need. “Have a very good capital position or access to capital. Cash is king,” adds Henderson.

While it is standard to prepare for the worst, businesses should also prepare for growth and all it involves. With expansion comes a need for further resources and, as a result, more capital. “Businesses should understand the effect revenues have on cash flow,” advises Grizzle. “Most business owners equate sales to profitability, however, increased sales require additional capital to support the sales growth. Projecting the cash flow cycle on a new product or service is essential to the financial health of any business.”

In Market President Jeff Higginbotham’s experience, business owners need to keep proper capitalization in mind. “We help clients with their capital structures—either advising on short-term credit facilities that are needed—or if a company is over capitalized, ideas on how to put that capital to work for them,” he says. Interest risk protection is another topic that needs to be evaluated, and often re-evaluated, whenever loans are involved.

Pope encourages developing a three-year forecast for your business to use as a resource for measuring progress. “Knowledgeable, experienced bankers can review those budgets and forecasts and give feedback to customers,” says Pope. “We serve as a sounding board.”

Explore Your Options

cobb-financial-institutions-quoteAs technology continues to rapidly evolve, banks and credit unions have more options and services to offer business owners that make the day-to-day much easier. At KeyWorth, Pope tells business customers to take advantages of their remote deposit capture scanners, which are placed in the business to scan checks from customers.  “It’s very efficient, very convenient for that business—especially small businesses that just can’t take the time to leave their business and take an hour or two and come to the bank every day,” says Pope.

Sylvia Hamby of Community Bank of the South is proud to offer customers lines of credit for cash flow purposes as well as facility construction loans to help them tackle whatever situation should arise in their business lives. “We can assist with business succession plans and ownership buyouts. Most importantly, each of our business customers has a local account officer that provides personal attention, advice and assistance in managing their business,” she says.

As all business owners know, time is money. “Businesses with higher level electronic banking needs and conveniences often select other treasury management services such as remote deposit capture, ACH electronic transfers of funds, wire transfers, online bill payment and electronic bank statements,” says Guthrie. “Each of these offer time- and money-saving opportunities—essential to small business owners.”

As a business owner, it is important to have a good relationship with your financial institution in the best interest of your business and investments. “Over the past several years, the economic conditions have created an opportunity for viable companies to obtain financing,” says Grizzle. “A relationship approach with a financial institution is a valuable resource for your business opportunities.” If you’ve been thinking about starting your own business or know someone who has harbored that dream for a long time, Cobb County has ample resources to make that vision a reality. So harness your skill, craft or trade, map out your business plan and assemble your team of trusted partners—which should definitely include your finacial institution.

Entrepreneurs turn the spotlight on Cobb

cobb-entrepreneurs-title

cobb-entrepreneurs-productsCobb County is on the map thanks to forward-thinking entrepreneurs who make everything from gelato to beer to cleaning solutions. Because of the good business climate in the county and its proximity to transportation arteries, these businesses make Cobb the epicenter for executives who have brought their ideas to fruition.

Taking a Brand National

Citrus Magic is Kennesaw’s Beaumont Products’ flagship brand. CEO Hank Picken was “creative shopping” at a hardware store in downtown Kennesaw in the early 1990s, when he spotted the Citrus Magic cleaning product on the shelf. With a background in consumer products and marketing, Picken knew the product had potential. “I thought it would be a good product to take national, so I called the company that was distributing it in Peachtree City and offered to buy the brand,” he says. “It was good timing because we bought the brand for $1 million and have turned it into a $30 million company today.”

The company’s big break into national marketing came a couple of years later when Citrus Magic was featured on QVC, with Picken’s wife Cheryl as guest host and spokesperson. “QVC approached us at a trade show that we attended in Chicago, and that led to Cheryl making 80 to 85 appearances on QVC,” Picken says. Today, Citrus Magic is sold by major retailers in the United States, including Walmart, Target, Publix, Kroger and various hardware chains, such as Ace and True Value.

cobb-entrepreneurs-hank-pickenOver the years, Beaumont Products has acquired another half-dozen products and taken them to market from its facility in Kennesaw. “Cobb County has been a great location for us,” Picken says. “Being close to I-75 has made a difference (because of the transportation network) and the City of Kennesaw has been very supportive to work with us as we’ve grown.”

Picken also attributes the company’s success to the workforce in Cobb. “Our third hire came to us from the Tommy Nobis Center, and we continue to find great employees there,” he says. “We also have hired a number of interns from Kennesaw State University.” Picken serves as a visiting professor at the business school at KSU.

Sweet Success

From a small gelateria in Dallas, Texas, Joshua Hochschuler founded Talenti Gelato & Sorbetto, which is now based in Marietta. After learning about old-style gelato processes while he worked in Buenos Aires, Argentina, he moved back to his hometown of Dallas and created hand-crafted gelatos sold from a single location to gourmet markets and local restaurants. By 2005, his brand was so popular that he closed the gelateria and shifted his business focus to making gelato for high-end retailers and restaurants.

Looking for partners to assist him with growing his premium brand, in 2008 Hochschuler connected with Steve Gill and Eddie Phillips, co-founders of Belvedere and Chopin vodkas. The two had successfully created a new category of luxury vodkas, which they later sold to the luxury goods company Moet Hennessy Louis Vuitton. Gill and Phillips helped Hochschuler enhanced the Talenti brand, taking it to national grocery stores. The company moved its plant to Marietta this year.

“Moving our plant to Marietta in 2013 would be an opportunity to continue to grow the Talenti brand, and so far that has proven to be true,” says Talenti CEO Gill. “We originally chose to move to Cobb County for its central location and proximity to Talenti’s biggest Northeast and Southeast markets. Along the way, we’ve found that Cobb County is a great place for the Talenti plant, as it has provided us with a well trained, productive workforce, and terrific and supportive local authorities.”

Tapping into Creativity

cobb-entrepreneurs-red-hareRed Hare Brewery in Marietta and Burnt Hickory Brewery in Kennesaw both produce unique hand-crafted beers carefully created by their founders.

Roger Davis started out in 2009 as a home brewer, crafting beers and creating recipes in his basement. Soon friends bragged about the beer he and friend Bobby Thomas were producing, and so the two founded Red Hare Brewery and opened for business on Labor Day 2011.

Today they’re located in an 11,000-square-foot warehouse near I-75 and Red Hare’s distinct brews are available in pubs and restaurants in Marietta, Decatur and Atlanta. The company’s flagship brew is Long Day Lager. Along with Gangway IPA, they are the first craft beers in the state to be offered in 12-ounce cans.

“It was a natural to choose Cobb County and our hometown of Marietta,” says Davis. “We’re close to my house and we’re close to the interstate and excellent transportation. And the space we found was conducive for establishing a brewery.” Red Hare products are distributed through 750 bars and restaurants in Georgia and South Carolina, and they are also available in grocery and beverage stores. This year, Red Hare will produce approximately 155,000 gallons of beer.

Scott Hedeen was an avid home brewer for nearly 20 years when he decided to step it up a notch by creating Burnt Hickory Brewery in Kennesaw. He has capitalized on the Civil War theme by choosing descriptive names like Ezekiel’s Wheel Pale Ale, his flagship, plus Cannon Dragger IPA and Big Shanty Graham Cracker Stout. He also brews seasonal styles.

Buy Local

Marion Savic’s new store, The Local Exchange, offers a collection of Cobb-based, Georgia-based and regional products all in one location. Opened in early September at 130 South Park Square in downtown Marietta, the store offers local foods, art, merchandise, books by local authors and artisan beers from area brewers. The Local Exchange will also be the pick-up site for a local community-supported agriculture food cooperative.

“There’s not a general store or a grocery on the Marietta Square, so our goal is to provide residents and visitors with a source for locally produced, useful and sought-after goods,” Savic says. “It will also be a fun shopping experience.”

She’ll be offering Pure Bliss organic products, foods from Bernhard’s and McEntyre’s bakeries in Smyrna, sausages from Patak’s Meats in Powder Springs, items from Georgia Spice Company in Marietta and prepared foods from Simply Fresh in East Cobb.

“You know, I’ve always wanted to have a store like this,” she says. “My grandfather had a grocery store, and I’m just carrying on the tradition with healthy and fresh foods.”

Here’s a listing of some products with Cobb County connections:

  • Elf on the Shelf: children’s books, elfontheshelf.com, Marietta
  • Kenny’s Great Pies: key lime, mango and lemon pies, kennysusa.com, Smyrna
  • Talenti Gelato & Sorbetto: gelato and premium ice cream, talentigelato.com, Marietta
  • Citrus Magic, Beaumont Products: beaumontproducts.com, Kennesaw
  • Burnt Hickory Brewery: craft beer, burnthickorybrewery.com, Kennesaw
  • Red Hare Brewery: craft beer, redharebrewery.com, Marietta

Chattahoochee Tech in Top 100 List for Two-Year Colleges

Chattahoochee Technical College was recently named to the list of the top 100 certificate-producing institutions in the United States among more than 1,800 two-year colleges that conferred such awards during the 2012-2013 academic year. Coming in at No. 25, Georgia’s largest technical college is one of three Georgia colleges to rank in the top 30. The rankings are determined by Community College Week magazine.

Cobb Library Foundation Celebrates 10 Years

This year, the Cobb Library Foundation celebrates its 10th anniversary. At a celebration this past June, Dr. Betty Ann Cook, executive director for community outreach and engagement at Chattahoochee Technical College and member of the CLF board, was selected South Cobb Citizen of the Year.

During her time at the college, she has coordinated many projects, including being responsible for developing and co-directing the “Experience America in Cobb” immersion program with South Korea. The CLF has supported Cobb County libraries by funding a portable computer lab, installing literacy stations and purchasing library materials.

Vehicle Charging Stations

Eight electric vehicle charging stations available for public use have been installed at Cobb Community Transit’s Marietta Transfer Center and Busbee Park and Ride. Each location has four chargers, and this initiative promotes CCT ridership from electric vehicle commuters.

These chargers were made possible by a grant and are part of The EV Project, funded by the U.S. Department of Energy. Local power providers Marietta Power & Water and Cobb EMC partnered to provide technical assistance and deliver power to the stations. Each station is capable of fully recharging an electric vehicle battery in two to six hours.

 

Leadership Cobb Announces Its Class of 2014

Leadership Cobb, the Cobb Chamber of Commerce’s premier leadership development program, has selected the participants for its class of 2014. More than 300 people were nominated for the program that starts this fall and runs through spring 2014.

Class members were selected from business, industry, education, government and other professions as well as from volunteer, civic and religious organizations. Beginning in 1983, Leadership Cobb focuses on developing and honing vital leadership skills in addition to promoting professional and personal growth via experiential learning sessions.