Showing posts with label Kingsley. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Kingsley. Show all posts

Friday, December 6, 2019

City of Dunwoody to buy Waterford Swim Tennis for park land and future trail system connecting neighborhoods.



Resolution Authorizing the Purchase of Property from the Waterford Neighborhood Association

City staff has performed all due diligence for the purchase of two land parcels located 4565 Dellrose
Drive, Tax Parcel No. 06-310-01-035 (3.39 acre parcel), and 2371 North Peachtree Way, Tax Parcel
No. 06-310-01-005 (3.77 acre parcel), from Waterford Neighborhood Association for a total of 7.16
acres.

Staff respectfully requests that Council (1) authorize the purchase of the lots located at 4565
Dellrose Drive and 2371 North Peachtree Way for the sum of $125,000 (2) authorize the City
Manager to execute the necessary documents following satisfactory review by legal counsel.

Thursday, February 21, 2019

DeKalb School System provides enrollment forcasting and redistricting information for Dunwoody Cluster.

I attended the meeting last night at Kingsley with about 100 neighbors, parents, school charter representatives, teachers and various DeKalb school administrators in attendance.  Meeting started about 6 and the first half discussed the process of enrollment forecasting and the second half started to get to the discussion on overcrowding but was cut short as the meeting was scheduled to end at 7 pm.

Long story short, little short term relief may happen at the elementary level because of Austin redistricting but capacity issues still abound. DHS enrollment continues upward with little improvement in sight.  Financial issues and build schedules were touched upon but no definitive information or answers were given. 

Here is the full Powerpoint presentation from last night.






Monday, January 7, 2019

Should the City of Dunwoody lower the School Zone speed limit from 25 to 15 mph? Is there enough enforcement of current driving standards? Are Speed Cameras the answer?

State law may allow a Speed Limit change but preclude radar enforcement below 25?
Is radar speed cameras enforcing at 25 mph a better solution?

A couple of weeks ago I received an email / social media post from a concerned Dunwoody school mom regarding school zone traffic, crosswalk enforcement issues that threatened the safety of her and her child while walking to school.  The DeKalb School System was copied on the crossing guard issue being raised as they handle that function, therefore I hope that specific issue is rectified as requested.

The resident had two more requests for the City, one was an increased police presence in school zones ensuring that all traffic rules are followed and I reached out to Dunwoody Police Chief Billy Grogan who stated that the officers would give some additional attention to the problem identified.

Based on the heavy workload of our small dedicated police force, I am guessing that this task was given to our Crime Reduction Team of three officers and a Sargent who were formed to handle many different targeted problem areas, including this specific one.

Our FY 2012 Dunwoody Budget included a proposal to add a Crime Response Team comprised of one sergeant and three patrol officers but because of budgetary constraints, these additional resources were not added until the next year.
"Proposed FY 2012 Dunwoody Budget - The Crime Response Team will utilize both traditional and non-traditional patrol techniques to deter criminal activity, reduce accidents and injuries from accidents, and improve the quality of life for our community. In particular, the Crime Response Team will implement the Data-Driven Approaches to Crime and Traffic Safety (DDACTS) program which integrates location-based crime and traffic data to establish effective and efficient methods for deploying the team. The Crime Response Team will be a key asset in addressing traffic and safety concerns around our schools; targeting hot spots and locations with high incidents of crime; conducting DUI enforcement and highway interdiction, and handling special investigations as needed. For example, one common complaint our Police Department receives regards traffic safety. Currently, complaints are funneled to the shift and assigned to officers who are working in the particular area of the complaint. In most cases, our officers are not able to address traffic complaints in a timely manner or as adequately as is necessary because their primary responsibility is to answer calls for service and a secondary responsibility is to improve visibility through active directed patrol."
In 2013, the CRT was finally budgeted but the justification language crept away from traffic/speed enforcement in order to focus more on hard crime.  With the level of turnover and vacancies in all police agencies including the City of Dunwoody, speed and traffic enforcement was probably put to the back burner from time to time in order to cover the general beat responsibilities.  The Dunwoody Police Department and the Crime Reduction Team has always been responsive to the needs of the community regarding traffic control and I am very appreciative for all they do.  As the Department gets back to full strength, my hope is that traffic/speed enforcement becomes more of a priority because I have heard of issues all over town (Peeler, Tilly Mill, Dunwoody Club, Happy Hollow, Kingsley, various subdivision cut through streets) and guessing there are issues in your neighborhood too.

The second request by the resident to the city was a reduction of the School Zone Speed Limit from 25 MPH to 15 MPH and based on my research of Georgia Law, the City of Dunwoody can do this if we wanted to but I was informed by staff that the Georgia Department of Transportation (GDOT) would need to allow/certify speed enforcement at the new lower speed and that would not happen without a change in Georgia law.   The City of Doraville recently lowered a few speed limits but now can't enforce the issue and are appealing the process.

I believe the proposal of lowering the school zone speed limit would raise several items into play, namely limited traffic flow on main arterial roads during rush hour and then the question comes down to how to effectively enforce the lower speeds.  Traffic congestion is something we all live with and I am guessing that we all take this into our scheduling and decisions on when and where to drive every day.  To me, ensuring a safe environment for our children to walk our neighborhoods by instituting a common-sense set of rules, would take a higher priority over traffic throughput for most people and it certainly does for me.

With many believing that they can't get a speeding ticket until they exceed the posted limit by 10 mph, it makes the 25 posted limit a defacto 35 mph zone.  Unfortunately, this is false, based on Georgia code the City of Dunwoody could be handing out speeding tickets in school zones at 1 mph over the posted limit.  The question then comes down to, do we need stricter enforcement of the current law or a lower limit?   Seeing the findings below of the pedestrian fatality rate jump from 5 percent to 40 percent for a speed increase from 20 to 30 mph.  It makes me question allowing a defacto speed higher than the posted 25 in school zones and therefore we need either a lower speed or better compliance of what we have.

 A 1999 National Highway Traffic Safety Administration study found that 5 percent of pedestrians are fatally injured when struck by a vehicle traveling at 20 mph or less. This compares with fatality rates of 40, 80, and nearly 100 percent when the pedestrian is struck at 30, 40, and 50 mph or more, respectively.  It also shows the school zone speed limits in various states as shown below.


The issue of speed enforcement in school zones vs the many other priorities of our police department also needs to be discussed because there is no way that there will always be able to have all of our school zones monitored by a police officer at all times.  Last year the Georgia General Assembly and Governor Deal approved HB 978 to provide for automated traffic enforcement safety devices in school zones.  Yep "zero tolerance" speed cameras are now allowed to enforce in school zones,  so if desired the City could contract with American Traffic Solutions to install either fixed, mobile or transferable speed cameras.   Is strict enforcement of the current 25 mph school speed limit the answer or if a lower speed is desired we could put up the signs but it appears that we would need to change to state law.  These proposed speed changes still won't stop those who want to ignore all other driving regulations and common courtesies but it could slow the traffic in school zones that are not already bottlenecked to a crawl.

As a father who had his son almost hit by a car while crossing to school with the help of a crossing guard, I take the pleas of a concerned Dunwoody school mom very seriously and am therefore placing this information out there for public discussion.

With every email I receive (and social media posts I read) regarding public safety, I always ask myself if we are we doing enough?  Are the laws and speed limits correct, are the sidewalks and crosswalks in the proper places and is our police department staffed appropriately so that they can ensure all of our safety?   Traffic calming and speed humps are not appropriate on arterial roads where some of our schools sit and then in residential areas these devices would need to be requested and approved by the residents of that street. The Dunwoody Police speed trailer is in constant use and is available to be requested for your neighborhood.  Our Crime Reduction Team can't focus on only traffic so we need a balanced approach whatever option we want to implement.

If you want changes, please speak up, be vocal as to your desires, email all seven members of the Dunwoody City Council as there will need to be a community discussion before these types of proposed changes are initiated.

Dunwoody wants to be a walkable and bikeable community but we are attempting to do so on streets that were designed for speed is problematic. Atlanta Magazine published an article this month that states that pedestrian and bicyclist deaths are increasing in the metro area and if we are not careful it is just a matter of time before a tragedy strikes our community.

To everyone else reading this, please slow down in school zones and residential streets, obey traffic signs and if you are driving children to school please obey the individual school drop off and carpool procedures.  If you are walking your children to school, thank your crossing guards and those watching out for the children.  Remember that everyone driving near the schools or dropping children off are stressed with the circumstances of their surroundings therefore extra care is always needed.

Finally, if you can reduce your own frustrations by avoiding the congestion near schools during the peak times by leaving a little earlier or modifying your route, please do so.   Thanks

John

Wednesday, March 7, 2018

Dunwoody DHS Dads receive written response from DeKalb School Superintendent R. Stephen Green on questions.


This morning the DHS Dads group had a meeting with DeKalb School Superintendent R. Stephen Green, prior to the meeting, the group aggregated questions/comments and submitted to them Dr. Green. As the meeting may have been cut a little short because of the water emergency, Dr. Green provided written replies to their inquiries and below are his responses as it was provided to me from the group.  I thought the back and forth conversation was worth sharing and thank you Dr. Green for your transparency on these issues.

Responses to questions for Dunwoody HS DADS Group
Wednesday, March 7, 2018


Q.      Can Kingsley field be improved? It slopes toward the school and the water flow is causing drainage problems and erosion to trees and sidewalks.   Also, can Chestnut field be improved?   Could both fields be used and maintained by the city?

A.      We can approach the City of Dunwoody to see if they would like to enter into an intergovernmental agreement for the upgrade and maintenance of the Chestnut ES and Kingsley ES fields.   

This would be similar to the current agreement we have with the City for the football field and track at Peachtree MS, where the City maintains the school district-owned facility.

Q.      DHS is already hundreds of students over capacity. What specific actions is Dr. Green taking to address school over-crowding?  DHS doesn’t have enough of the following to adequately serve our children:
      Classrooms
      Cafeteria space
      Bathrooms
      Locker Room showers/lockers
      Etc.

      We have $17.7 million 26-classroom addition planned for Dunwoody HS to be completed by fall 2022. A Construction Advisory Committee (CAC), a sub-committee of the school council (now Parent Advisory Council) will collaborate with the architect of record in what improvements could be included as part of the scope of work within the Board-approved budget.


Q.      Status update on the renovation of the school.
      What is the plan for the growing school population at DHS?
      How DHS to address the growing student population until the expansion is ready in 2021? 
      More trailers?

      We will have more portable classrooms until the addition is complete in fall of 2022.  This summer, we will bring out one more quad (4 classrooms) with restrooms.  We are currently working with the architect of record to ensure the placement of the portable classrooms will fit relative to the possible location of the proposed addition.

Q.        What about parking for students, teachers and visitors?

A. We will add more parking as part of the classroom expansion.

Q.      What is DCSDs’ intention for the land owned on Chamblee-Dunwoody Rd. where the former Middle School was torn down? 

Couldn't this be leveraged to educate students in any way? 

Unless there’s a school building coming to relieve student crowding, why isn’t the land sold and the money put back into serving existing students?  
DCSD has held this land for approximately 15 years without our students benefiting in any way. 

              The land is valuable and could bring in more revenue to the school district.  We have looked at possible options for this, including support/office needs for the school district.  We are still reviewing this and the Board could make a decision to sell the land.

      Staffing for the school – currently two staff members (1 is brand new this year) handle all of the 504 and IEP processing and testing. 
      Each school is staffed with counselors, social workers and psychologists and other support persons that assist with the Section 504 process and special education staff (teachers and case managers) and support (LTSE) that ensure goals listed on the IEP's of students are met.   
      504 Plan/Hospital Homebound Chair # 1
       Dr. Thenita Williams 
  (Students with last names L-Z)
      504 Plan Chair # 2 
      Amy Dyche-  newest counselor hired in November
  (Students with last names A-K)
      Number of students with active 504 plan
      220
      Number of students who receive HHB Instruction
      12
Additional note: MTSS Chair facilitates SST meetings and monitors data collection
      Name of Lead Teacher for Special Education
       Coleen Conway
      Name of Special Education Department Chair 
      Rose Abraham
      Total Number of SPED Teachers 
      16
      Co-Taught 
      11 co-taught teachers
      Resource
      1 Teacher
      ID 
      3 Teachers (2 MID/MOID and 1 SID/PID). 1 one to one Teacher for a student
      Number of case managers 
      16
      Number of students with IEP’s  
      178   

       Who specifically made the decision last August to require DCS teachers to attend a day long program at the Infinite Energy Center in fundamentally an “employee rally”? 

      The Superintendent and the Board of Education approved the Opening of Schools Convocation on August 4, 2017.

      How was funding for that activity reached when DCS can’t seem to fund some of the very basic necessities?

For example, we couldn’t get DCS to pay for buses to transport students to their Football Camp and private donors (via the Dunwoody Gridiron Club) had to pay for the transportation.

      Each division/department is allocated a budget for July 1 – June 30.  The funding for the event was paid for through the Communications Division’s budget.
 *(The total cost of the event was $165,455.77 this included rental of the facility, production costs, transportation, interpreters for hearing impaired employees, speaker, signage, t-shirts, and bottled water.)

      Was allocating money for the Infinite Energy Center the best use of funds?

      An Opening Schools Convocation has not been held in the district for 10 years. The event was designed as a professional development experience in which all staff (new and experienced, north and south, east and west) had the opportunity to engage with each other.

The event was a direct response to an expressed desire to have us come together – to create a culture of unity and togetherness as One Team, One Voice, One DeKalb. It was also an opportunity for all staff to hear first-hand the depth and breadth of our accomplishments and to hear directly from the superintendent regarding the charge: the next steps we will be taking toward the fulfillment of our vision and mission as a district focused on deep teach and learning.

It was also a wonderful opportunity to see our talented students perform on stage.


Q.        The high jump mat is completely unsafe and unusable.  This is a major safety concern for our kids.

A. The Athletics Department provides equipment for the regional stadiums. Teams are able to visit those locations for practice at any time. 

Q.  There is no Booster Club for the Track Team and the majority of the kids who participate in track can barely afford the minimal dues the coach’s collect to cover the basic expenses of meets, coach’s salary and uniforms.

      The coach’s salary comes from the district allocated budget. Uniforms are provided by the district as well on a three year rotational cycle. Collected fees should not be used for these purposes. 

Q.      How can we best reach our student sub-groups? For example, DHS has a significant population of Latin American students and there is a language barrier.
A. The English Learner Department works closely with local school staff to provide training to meet the needs of all speakers of languages other than English.  Training is provided for teachers and administrators. Parents are also supported through the Title III parent centers. 
Q.      Can we have a paid liaison who is fluent in Spanish to help communicate with these students and parents? 
A.      General Budget considerations are being made for the increase of support for students and parents that speak a primary home language other than English.

        What specific, incremental security measures is Dr. Green intending to put in place to heighten school security, if any?
        Increases are being made in the general budget to increase the number of school resource officers across the district.
A pilot for the installation of metal detectors will be launched.  We are also working to enhance security cameras in schools and have added vestibules to newer construction projects.  The K-9 unit (2 trained in narcotics and explosives detection) have been added to the Public Safety unit. 
Q. Those that are controlled by the DeKalb County Schools vs. the State or Federal Government? 

A. The DeKalb County School Police work closely with other local jurisdictions to ensure the safety of students and staff on a daily basis.

Q.      Capacity and student overpopulation issues at Dunwoody High School.

      The Board approved $17.7 million under E-SPLOST V to construct a 26-classroom addition at Dunwoody HS to address this issue.

The new addition is slated to be completed by fall 2022. In the interim, the Operations Division will be installing additional quad units (4 classrooms per unit) with restrooms to temporarily address overcrowding at the school. 


Q.      One third of our students are on free/reduced lunch. Our cafeteria lines are too long and some students are not able/willing to wait in line to eat. For some of the kids, this is their best meal of the day.

How can you help us ensure that our kids have access to lunch and do not have to go hungry throughout the school day? As a bonus, it would be nice if the quality of the food was higher. 

      The School Nutrition Coordinator, Maureen Pickett and Connie Walker, Interim Executive Director of School Nutrition, met with the student council lead, Ebony Greene and student members at Dunwoody HS during the fall 2017. A survey and a taste test was conducted with the student council to identify student preferences and menu selections.

We are in the process of obtaining equipment to add a Grab and Go serving line in the cafeteria. 

The next step to meet with DCSD technicians to determine the electrical voltage needs in the cafeteria. This will increase the student participation and flow the traffic during meal service. The target for completion is April, 2018.


Q. Please address the level of athletic support that the school gets from the County, some specific examples below:

      Took 8 weeks to get the Tennis court lights to come on in time to be useful for home matches. 
      Can we get local control over those facilities to allow the coaches to turn on and off as needed?

      The Division of Operations will assess the lighting concerns to determine if the automatic timers or photocell sensors on the Tennis court lights need to be replaced or recalibrated. If so, our Region 1 Facilities Manager will work with GA Power and our in-house electricians to do so as soon as possible.

Wednesday, March 15, 2017

Kingsley Elementary's Spring Festival - Saturday



Saturday, March 18th
11am-3pm
Kingsley Elementary in Dunwoody, Georgia

Carnival Games With Prizes, Game Truck, Laser Tag, Hay Ride, $1 Raffle, Lunch, Kona Ice and more!!!

Raffle Prizes: Spring Break and Summer Camp Weeks, Amazing Gift Baskets, and More!!!  Average raffle prize is worth over $200! 


All money raised will be used to help support Kingsley’s STEM program and our playground initiative! 

Ticket’s available for purchase day of the event - cash or credit card. 

Thursday, September 15, 2016

Dunwoody High & Peachtree Middle School boards agree that Option B with an addition at PCMS would be best to keep community together.



Dunwoody Friends and Neighbors,

There has been a lot of discussion in recent weeks about three options that have been presented by DeKalb County School System to deal with the growing student population in our middle and high schools. A recommendation has been requested from the school councils at Dunwoody High and Peachtree Middle. If you are busy and don't want to read the full justification, please click the link below to an online survey and select Option B.

https://goo.gl/forms/kSFTQLhRzoTUObSr2

(Note there are links within the survey with lots of specific information about each option.)

Why Option B?

1. When representatives from Peachtree Charter Middle School, Dunwoody High School, and elementary schools throughout our cluster met to discuss these options, we were all still learning about the options, but there was a unifying ideal of keeping our Dunwoody kids at Dunwoody High School. Options A & C send roughly 30% of the kids currently zoned to DHS to either a new Sequoyah High School in Doraville or to Chamblee HS. No decisions have been made at this time as to where those kids will come from, but the process would surely not be a fun one for our community. Option B keeps our attendance zone intact.

2. Option B comes with a $23,000,000 investment in Dunwoody High School. Options A & C come with $0 for schools in the Dunwoody cluster. (Note that there are other pockets of eSPLOST money that could go to our schools, but this is the only category being discussed by the school system at this time.) DHS is full of amazing teachers, kids, and parents who make the DHS community great, but aspects of the facility are limiting. As a Council last year we realized the toil involved in getting even small investments in our school. Throughout the year we pushed to get an adequate supply of functioning lockers for the kids, signage on the front of the school with our name on it, and more than one functioning copier in the school for teachers. Progress was made, but the journey shed light on the difficulty involved in getting things done. This option presents a unique opportunity for a significant portion of eSPLOST money to be dedicated to our cluster. This investment will be a long term improvement to DHS, helping our growing student population for years to come.

3. Does this mean 600 more kids at DHS? NO, it does not. The projection is that in 2022, with the increasing student population in our attendance zone, DHS population will be 2,093 students. Today there are 1,826 students. The problem is that our capacity is only about 1,500 students. The improvements will increase the school capacity to 2,100 students, eliminating the need for trailers, floating teachers, and addressing long-standing facility limitations.

4. What about parking? The open retention pond in the parking area can be buried and paved over, substantially improving the parking situation, even with more kids. We are pushing for this to be a priority.

5. What is the proposed variation that impacts PCMS? The problem with all of the options presented is that they send a significant number of middle school kids out of Dunwoody. The variation proposes that PCMS also receive an addition to handle the extra capacity there, taking the same approach as the high school.

6. What about the budget? Option B is $7,000,000 under budget. Option A is $77,000,000 over budget. Option C is $54,000,000 over budget. The school system seems confident that they can find more money for other options but ultimately that is going to take from other things in the school system.

A summarized list of pros/cons from a Dunwoody perspective (along with room for comment) has been posted here:

http://dunwoodyschooldaze.blogspot.com/2016/09/pros-and-cons-of-dekalb-school.html

Stepping back from the details of this issue for a moment, all of these options have some good aspects for Dunwoody and the impact for Dunwoody is less with any of them than what much DeKalb County Schools will see. We are also ultimately at the hands of the final superintendent recommendation and School Board approval. Our community will continue to make our schools great regardless of the option selected, but it is the opinion of the DHS and PCMS School Councils that the benefits of this modified Option B far outweigh those of the other options.

Please don't forget to click here or go back to the link at the top and complete the survey.

Chad Griffith, DHS Council Chair
On behalf of DHS Council

Allegra Johnson, PCMS Foundation Chair
On behalf of PCMS Foundation

Thursday, March 17, 2016

Kingsley Charter School’s annual spring festival is Saturday March 19th.


Kingsley’s annual spring festival is Saturday March 19th. Over 20 class booths, 5th grade sponsored food court, game truck,  laser tag, obstacle course, hay ride, and much more.  We also are having a auction featuring some great items. We have a Justin Upton baseball and a Charles Barkley basketball and a Julio Jones jersey. We also have a artwork, jewelry, a hot air balloon ride for 2 plus, summer camps, local festival entries many other items. Come out from 10-2 and enjoy a great day with friends and neighbors. 
Location: 2051 Brendon Drive
Dunwoody, Georgia 30338

Sunday, March 6, 2016

Tonight - Dunwoody Homeowners Association to again discuss Crown Towers proposal for two large residental condo towers.

https://vimeo.com/157909578



DHA Board of Directors Meeting
Sunday, March 6, 2016 @ 7:30 P.M.
DeKalb Cultural Arts Center (Room 4)
5339 Chamblee-Dunwoody Road
Dunwoody, GA 30338

1.                 Announcements and introduction of distinguished visitors

2.                 Approval of minutes for February  15, 2016 meeting—Lindsay Ballow

3.                 Discussion – Crown Holdings development proposal for 244 Perimeter Center Parkway (Goldkist site)—Charlie Brown (to answer any questions)

4.                 Discussion – Dunwoody Farmers Market— Bill Grossman

5.                 Discussion – October Chili Cook-off – Bill Grossman

6.                 Funding Requests:
Dunwoody Nature Center – Alan Mothner
Kingsley Elementary – Erika Harris and Ana Crisbilbao
Dunwoody Preservation Trust (Lemonade Days)—
Hope Follmer

          Board only session: Votes as needed on any motions including:
  Support (with conditions) or Oppose Crown Holdings development proposal.  (If with conditions, what conditions?)
 Bike/Walk Dunwoody support and funding request
  Nature Center funding request
  Kingsley Elementary funding request
  Dunwoody Preservation Trust funding request.
  Stage Door Players funding request
Adjourn
Next meeting:  Sunday, May 1, 2016, 7:30pm (no meeting in April)

Thursday, March 5, 2015

Public is Invited to Kingsley Charter Elementary's - Spring Fling this Saturday, March 7th in Dunwoody


When: Saturday, March 7th 
Where: Kingsley Charter Elementary School Field
Time: 10:00 am - 2:00 pm

The Kingsley Charter Elementary Spring Fling will be this Saturday, March 7th! 

The Spring Fling, formerly The Fall Festival, is open to all!

The game truck and laser tag, will will be back, plus they have an exciting new event: an obstacle course that will incorporate the playground plus class booths and hayrides! 

Plus- There will be several Raffle items for parents will including a Home Depot gift card valued up to $100, GYRO GYRO, PICAYUNE TOYS, HARD EXERCISE WORKS, JUST TO NAME A FEW.

The 5th grade food court will be open serving hamburgers, hotdogs, pizza, pork sandwiches, chips, and soda (CASH ONLY)

Remember to invite your neighbors, grandparents and other family members!

Friday, August 8, 2014

A busy Monday night agenda for the Dunwoody City Council


Agenda 6 pm  &  Agenda 7 pm

Update on the CAD-to-CAD Interface Project from L.R. Kimball. (Gary Rapp)

Presentation of Financial Report Through June 30, 2014. (Check Register?)

Kingsley Safe Routes to School Update. (GDOT Project - design change denied - options?)

Proclamation Recognizing Bobbi Sedam. (also makes wonderful banana bread & pumpkin pies!)

SECOND READ: Amendment to Chapter 2 Administration - Terms of Boards and Commissions.

Discussion of Renewal of an Intergovernmental Agreement with the Chattahoochee River 911 Authority for 911 Call-Taking and Police Dispatching. (5 years @ 1.125 Million per Yr)

Appeal of Administrative Decision for the Approval of a Revised Final Plat at 5258 Vernon Lake Drive, Dunwoody, GA 30338. The Tax Parcel Number is 18 374 03 017.

FIRST READ: RZ 14-081: Pursuant to the City of Dunwoody Zoning Ordinance, Applicant, Stacy Patton, on Behalf of Minerva USA, LLC, Seeks Permission to Rezone Property Currently Zoned Office-Institution (O-I) District to Multi-Dwelling Residential (RM-100) District to Allow for Construction of 55 Townhomes. The Subject Property is Located at 4330 Georgetown Square, Dunwoody, GA 30338. The Tax Parcel is 18 345 03 007.

Discussion of Sustainability Plan Adoption.

Discussion of RFP 2014-09 Replacement of Playground Equipment at Windwood Hollow Park.  (Was hoping for something more original?)

Discussion of Agreement with Georgia DOT for Signal Communications Network Project.

FIRST READ: Ordinance Authorizing the Granting of an Easement to Atlanta Office Investment for a Crane Swing Easement.

Discussion of Streamlining Resident Catering License Fees.

Discussion of Contract With Federal Signal for Public Safety Video Project.