Showing posts with label Sandy Springs. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Sandy Springs. Show all posts

Saturday, October 13, 2018

Dunwoody Police / Chatcomm 911 is looking to fill Telecommunicator position in local 911 Center. @IXPCorp


To pre-register and for more information, please email Jill Brown at jbrown@chatcomm.org

This same position also looks to be advertised on the parent company website here.

Telecommunicator
in Sandy Springs, GA

Position Overview
Full-Time / Part-Time - This position is responsible for receiving emergency and non-emergency calls for service over the telephone and by other means, employing appropriate call screening protocols, and responding to those calls by dispatching the appropriate public safety resources.  This position is responsible for interaction with other public safety dispatch centers in the answering and transferring of calls and incident information, and for maintaining communications with field personnel in law enforcement, fire and EMS agencies.  This position is required to respond appropriately to requests for services and information from field personnel. The Telecommunicator will report directly to the Shift Supervisor.
Essential Functions & Responsibilities
  • Processes incoming and outgoing emergency and non-emergency telephone calls, ensuring agency policy, procedures and goals are met.
  • Dispatches and communicates with law enforcement, fire and EMS units, ensuring agency policy, procedures and goals are met.
  • Provides Supervisor with input regarding policies and procedures pertaining to the operation of the communications center.
  • Coordinates with Supervisor to implement changes in Center procedures.
  • Speaks English clearly and verbally communicates effectively.
  • Works effectively and calmly in a high stress environment.
  • Maintains familiarity with the general geography of the communities served.
  • Meets all training requirements of the Center.
  • Participates in available professional development for center staff.
  • Communicates in a positive manner with Supervisor and other center staff.
  • Reports commendable performance or deficiencies or liability issues to Supervisor in a timely manner.
Required knowledge/skills
  • Knowledge of accepted call handling practices for public safety call takers with an emphasis on professionalism and high level of customer service.
  • Familiarity with principles and practices of radio communications as well as the proper policies and procedures used in public safety dispatching with an emphasis on professionalism and high level of customer service.
  • Knowledge of all aspects of operations of a public safety communications center.
  • Communication facilities, equipment and management practices as they pertain to the operation of a public safety communications center.
  • Technology systems utilized by a public safety communications center.
  • Operational needs of public safety responders for law enforcement, fire and EMS.
  • Agency’s geographical service areas and relationship/location of public safety responders.
  • Practical working knowledge in public safety communications.
Requirements
  • Successfully complete a myriad of training initiatives and certifications for call receiving and dispatching.
  • Learn to operate a variety of technology including contemporary computer, radio and telephone systems.
  • Work independently with minimal supervision.
  • Work in an environment where multiple activities are routinely underway that influence the performance of the duties assigned.
  • Coordinate multiple priorities and competing demands on time and multi-tasking.
  • Simultaneously process information from multiple sources (verbal, text, and video) and keep information clear.
  • Quickly and accurately recall information, specifically names, numbers and details.
  • Make appropriate decisions based on minimal information.
  • Deal with sensitive information in a discreet and professional manner.
  • Follow prescribed rules, regulations and procedures.
  • Recall details and record information/numbers quickly and correctly.
  • Communicate effectively and professionally, both orally and in writing.
  • Work collaboratively and cooperatively with co-workers and personnel from customer agencies.
  • Be able to work in a shift-work environment with variable hours of work and schedule over the course of typical work year.
  • Present ideas and recommendations in a clear and concise manner.
  • Be reliable, and highly dependable in reporting for work on time and as scheduled, on a consistent basis.
  • Be available for overtime as needed.
Qualifications and Skills
  • High School Diploma (or equivalent).
  • Two (2) years of proven paid experience in public safety communications (preferred).
  • Three (3) years general work experience.​
Must complete/have completed:
  • Criminal Justice Information System (CJIS) Terminal Operator Certification
  • Emergency Medical Dispatch (EMD) Certification through the National Academies of Emergency Dispatch (NAED).
  • Emergency Fire Dispatch (EFD) Certification through the National Academies of Emergency Dispatch (NAED).
  • Emergency Telecommunicator Certification (ETC) through the National Academies of Emergency Dispatch (NAED).
  • General police, fire and EMS operations training.
  • Cardio Pulmonary Resuscitation (CPR).
Work Environment
  • Shift work environment where hours of work will be driven by the call volume demands of the agency rather than convenience of the staff.
  • Breaks and meals scheduled by Supervisors rather than individual desire.
  • Call back and overtime required.
  • 24/7 operations with work scheduled on days others consider holidays.
  • Work performed at a stationary work station.
  • Occasionally will need to handle hostile or abusive callers in a professional manner.
  • Must be able to perform under pressure and in a stressful environment.
Physical Demands
  • Dexterity of hands and fingers to operate personal computers.
  • Sitting for extended periods of time working at computer keyboards, monitoring a variety of public safety communications systems, completing documentation required of operations.
  • Vision, specifically to include up close, distance, color and peripheral; depth perception and ability to adjust focus.
  • Hearing and speaking to exchange information with emergency callers and public safety personnel.
How to Apply:
Please send your resume and cover letter to ixphr@ixpcorp.com
This position will remain open until filled.

Sunday, April 19, 2015

RIP Sandy Springs Mayor Eva Galambos - without you there would be no City of Dunwoody.

The City of Dunwoody owes much to Mayor Galambos

Thursday, February 20, 2014

City of Dunwoody, GA collectively states "Google Fiber, I want my high speed access !!"


In early February 2010, I learned of the Google Fiber Initiative and pushed for the City of Dunwoody to apply but based on Google’s requested city size to complete the application, the City of Dunwoody would need to partner with neighboring cities in order to meet the minimum requirements. I brainstormed and saw a joint application with Dunwoody, Sandy Springs, Chamblee & Doraville being a very viable one and posted my thoughts on my blog of February 11, 2010 entitled Imagine the top end of Atlanta as a technology hub tied together with the fastest internet. Let's ask Google to help make it happen.

From there the City Manager and City Staff took my request seriously and started talking to our neighboring cities. In the end, I believe that Sandy Springs was big enough to submit a single application therefore Dunwoody then partnered with Decatur, Avondale Estates, Chamblee and Doraville as well as Emory University and Georgia Power on the final application submission under the name “Atlanta Urban Area Partnership for Google”.

Besides the application which was submitted along with Resolutions of Support from each of the participating cities, a video was produced and submitted along with the application and it is shown below.

http://vimeo.com/10462543

I know that ultra-high speed internet service will be the future life blood of a community and that businesses and tech savvy individuals would be drawn to that infrastructure. Besides Google Fiber, I have pushed for other expanded internet options like UVerse which is Fiber to the Neighborhood (Node) vs Google’s plan which is to complete the last mile and go Fiber to the Home.

Today Google announced that the Atlanta area is in the running for the next wave of investment and in doing so named eight surrounding municipalities by name but did not specifically include the City of Dunwoody, even though we were in direct partnership with several of the cities that were specifically named. My guess is that Google is ready to start with any viable area in the Atlanta market and I can tell you that the City of Dunwoody is ready, willing and able to complete the next stage of the process in working with the provider to bring the service to our community.

From the moment that Google announced possible expansion cities, my inbox was lit up with information as to why the City of Dunwoody was not named and if I could summarize the collective message of those inquiries it would be "Google Fiber, I want my high speed access !!"

If you are interested in this project, please do me two favors.  First go to this link and click the blue CHECK ADDRESS box or the blue GET UPDATES box to register your address as being interested in the service; second if you are a Facebook user, please go to the “Atlanta Urban Area Partnership for Google” page and like it for future updates.

The City of Dunwoody is reaching out to Google as to specifics and we look forward to working with them in the very near future.

Sunday, January 13, 2013

Is this the best option for Chamblee Dunwoody & Spalding?

Click above for full analysis.

The intersection of Spalding Drive with Chamblee-Dunwoody Road, Spender Trace, and Spalding Club Court has some significant challenges. Citizens of both the City of Dunwoody and the City of Sandy Springs have expressed concerns about the safety of the southbound left turn from Spalding Drive onto Chamblee-Dunwoody Road.

This intersection is currently a five-leg signalized intersection. Spalding Drive is the main street and the two neighborhood streets are split phased from one another. Chamblee-Dunwoody Road operates as an exclusive phase. This intersection has no turn lanes or pedestrian facilities.

The intersection operates in a less than optimal fashion. The split phase operation on the neighborhood streets introduces delay which is particularly realized when there are detection failures. The southbound left turn from Spalding Drive to Chamblee-Dunwoody Rd has no left turn lane and tight visibility. Modifications are worth considering for the benefit of both the Cities of Dunwoody and Sandy Springs.

Several alternatives have been evaluated to improve the safety of the intersection. As outlined in the study linked above, diverting the traffic to another intersection and closing Chamblee-Dunwoody Road (as shown in the drawing) should provide the most benefit for the cost. Providing a southbound left turn signal phase (Alternative C in the operational analysis) is the next most cost effective option, but does not fully resolve the southbound left turn concerns.

Monday, August 27, 2012

Meeting Tonight to discuss Life Center Church expansion.

 Major Expansion of Life Center Ministries?

I have received several emails regarding an expansion of  Life Center Ministries on Mt. Vernon Rd in Sandy Springs and was given notice that there is a meeting taking place Tonight to discuss it.  I was provided a few documents but the quality was poor and they were hard to read therefore I didn't see the use of posting them.

The meeting is planned for Monday Aug 27, 5 PM at Brooke Farm Pavilion located at the end of Brooke Farm Drive. All are welcome to attend.

"Are you and the council aware that the Life Center Church located on Mt. Vernon across the street from Brooke Farm is requesting a usage variance to build a Discovery Point Daycare on its property? The daycare facility is 10,000 sq feet and will house up to 240 kids with operating hours from 6am to 6:30 PM Monday- Friday. The property is Sandy Springs but affects all of us in Dunwoody as well. We in Brooke Farm have formed a fact finding committee to keep neighbors and interested parties informed."

Life Center Ministries
2690 Mount Vernon Road
Atlanta, GA 30338

Dear Fellow Neighbors and HOA Officials,

The meeting is planned for Monday Aug 27, 5 PM at Brooke Farm Pavilion located at the end of Brooke Farm Drive. All are welcome to attend. We are preparing our plan for the August 30 Community Developer Resolution Meeting, the Sept 20 Planning and Zoning Meeting and the Oct 16 City Council Meeting.

Our contacts include Deerfield, Deerfield East 1, 2, Deerfield North, Spalding Lakes, St Andrews, Brooke Ridge, The Gates at Farmbrooke, Hunters Woods, Ryefield, Dunwoody Heritage. Ideally, each neighborhood will establish a small committee to co-ordinate with our efforts.

Please bring the speaker or representative from your neighborhood who will attend the zoning meetings so we can establish a the plan to include all appropriate objections and determine the most effective offense.

Attending will be a zoning veteran who will give advice about the process.

I am attaching the latest plat the church provided. It shows the size of the daycare building, the location and the landscape plan. Astonishingly, it is almost the size of the current church sanctuary and has a bigger footprint when the 2 playgrounds are included.

As a footnote, the little historical white house on the church property will be demolished if the plan is implemented.

Linda

Wednesday, May 30, 2012

Greater Perimeter Business Expo on June 1, 2012


Dunwoody and Sandy Springs Chambers of Commerce 
have come together to showcase Perimeter-area businesses.

Westin Atlanta Perimeter North Hotel 
7 Concourse Parkway, 
Sandy Springs, GA 30328 

Saturday, September 17, 2011

Weekend Plans - football, supporting our neighbor's festivals and more football.


I just got back from the Dunwoody High School football game where I spent some quality time with my 11 yr old son Riley.  We seemed to see half the town (and several political candidates) there as it was homecoming night and the Court was dressed to the nines.  We sat between the Band and the Cheerleaders and had a great time watching a well played game by Dunwoody winning 34 - 3.  Between my weekend honey-do list and kids activities, including a football game with the Atlanta Colts where I am the designated water-boy, I am going to try to squeeze in the Taste of Chamblee which is taking place on Saturday.

I think I will also hit up the Dunwoody Lacrosse Car Wash too as it needs to be done and I know the program is busting at the seams with little resources or grounds to play on as they have lofty long term plans for the program.  Sunday, I might hit up the Sandy Springs Festival which is going on all weekend, but I may need to be well rested for that Falcons / Eagles game which starts late?

Saturday

Dunwoody HS Girls Lacrosse Car Wash
Clean Cars needed for Homecoming Dance
Burger King in Dunwoody Village (Shops at Dunwoody)
9am till 1pm


Taste of Chamblee 11-8 pm
Broad and Peachtree near City Hall

Patrons will purchase food tickets for $1 each and tickets will be used for event food purchases at participating restaurants. Participating restaurants will serve sample sized portions of their specialties for 1-4 tickets per serving. The Art Walk will feature local and regional artists offering a variety of unique art including paintings, photography, pottery, graphics, sculptures, jewelry and much more. The Kidz Zone will feature a full array of interactive games and art projects for kids of all ages. Grab a table in the Beer Garden and enjoy some of the area’s best live music and entertainment on the Music Stage.

11:00am Julie Gribble www.juliegribble.com
1:00pm TOC Main Stage Winners - OpenMic
3:00pm Martay The Partay www.myspace.com/martayandthepartay
4:30pm Heaven Davis www.heavendavis.com
6:00pm Yacht Rock Revue www.yachtrockrevue.com

Sunday

Sandy Spring Festival at Heritage Green

Sunday, April 17, 2011

Dunwoody to rebid City Services to up to Seven Contracted Private Companies.


The City of Dunwoody, soon after creation started offering services by setting three, three year contracts into place with private vendors to provide Public Works, Community Development and Financial & Administrative Services.  This week the City released an RFP to rebid pretty much the same City Services but we have done so into several smaller pieces, so that smaller companies and subcontractors that are currently utilized might be able to compete for the bids. On the filpside, we are also allowing a large single company to also propose a single contract to provide all City services.

The City is searching for the Contractor(s) that will be able to provide municipal services in the following service areas: Public Works, Finance and Administrative Services, Planning and Zoning, Information Technology, Building Permits and Inspections, Parks and Recreation and Public Relations and Marketing.  Bidders may respond to more than one service area.

The RFP is located here and I hope as many companies as possible apply as ultimately competition among applicants will improve city services and drive the overall price down.

The City of Sandy Springs who it looks like was locked in to a 5 year contract, is now following Dunwoody's lead by looking for smaller, more specialized contractors to replace the one single general contractor who currently sub-contacts much of the work.  This video which highlights Sandy Springs has a lot of similarities to the City of Dunwoody.

Tuesday, September 28, 2010

Video of September 27th Dunwoody City Council Meeting


Meeting recap, we amended the 2010 budget to remove two buildings at Brook Run, put $100,000 towards sidewalks, outlawed littering (including blowing leaves and grass into the street), cleaned up the tax code with minor edits, rejected the proposed noise ordinance changes, deferred the accessory structures change, approved the sign plan for the Dunwoody Music Festival, hired an Economic Development Manager to promote new businesses within the City, and deferred a decision on repaving Dunwoody Club Drive until discussions with Sandy Springs can be had regarding standardized lane widths.

I forgot to add that we also passed the Outdoor Lighting Efficiency Ordinance which would require efficient operation of outdoor lighting by limiting misdirected, excessive, or unnecessary outdoor lighting. There was a last minute change to this proposal which allowed upward sign lighting, which I was against because it is contrary to what was intended, but since this ordinance was not specifically targeting signs and even had a statement in there that it was not applicable to signs (page 4, last sentence on applicability); I voiced my concerns and approved the measure along with the other council members present.


Friday, September 24, 2010

Dunwoody City Council Meeting Agenda for Monday Sep 27th at 7 pm

Monday, September 27th
Dunwoody City Hall
41 Perimeter Center East
Dunwoody, GA 30346
7:00 p.m. - Watch Live


Proclamation Commemorating the 40th Anniversary of the Dunwoody Homeowners Association.

SECOND READ - Ordinance to Amend Chapter 26, Streets, Sidewalks, and Other Public Places, Section 26-265 Definitions of Special Events.

SECOND READ - Ordinance to Amend Fiscal Year 2010 Budget.

SECOND READ - Ordinance to Amend Purchasing Policy.

SECOND READ - Ordinance to Amend Chapter 24: Offenses and Miscellaneous Offenses to Add Litter Control Regulations.

Approval for Staff to Dispose of Excess, Surplus or Obsolete Materials.

RESOLUTION to Adopt Administrative Hearing Procedures for the City of Dunwoody.

Approval of December Meeting Dates.

PUBLIC HEARING & SECOND READ - Proposed Text Amendment to Chapter 10: Business and Occupation Taxes.

PUBLIC HEARING & SECOND READ - Proposed Text Amendment to Chapter 27: Zoning to Add Outdoor Lighting Efficiency Ordinance.

PUBLIC HEARING & SECOND READ - Proposed Text Amendment to Chapter 18: Noise.

PUBLIC HEARING - Proposed Text Amendment to Chapter 27: Zoning re: Accessory Structures.

RESOLUTION Appointing Hearing Officer for the Appeals Process Related to Various Licensing Processes. (Richard Carothers, Esq & Michael Rothenberg, Esq)

Approval of Additional Signage Request for Dunwoody Music Festival.

Approval of Economic Development Program Implementation.
– Amendment to Position Allocation Chart to Add Economic Development Manager
– Amendment to Salary Table to Add Economic Development Manager Salary
– Approval of Job Description for Economic Development Manager

Modification to Clark Patterson Lee Contract for Economic Development Manager Position.

Approval of an Intergovernmental Agreement Between Sandy Springs and City of Dunwoody for Paving.

Tuesday, February 23, 2010

AJC states "Atlanta's safest neighborhood is located in Dunwoody"

Atlanta's safest neighborhood located in Dunwoody
Unfortunately this location is just a few blocks away, over the border in Sandy Springs.

America Online recently ranked the safest neighborhoods in the country's 50 biggest cities. One problem: Atlanta's safest community, Spalding Drive and Jett Ferry Road, isn't in Atlanta.  It's just north of the city, in newly incorporated Dunwoody. Nitpicking, perhaps, but would Spalding/Jett Ferry even rate as Dunwoody's safest neighborhood?

Regardless, these rankings reaffirm that safety doesn't come cheap.
The median house value in Spalding/Jett Ferry is $773,081, according to Neighborhood Scout. The "urban sophisticates" who call the Dunwoody neighborhood home tend to be executives, with more than 72 percent having earned at least an undergraduate degree.

AOL's personal finance site, Wallet Pop, reports that Spalding/Jett Ferry residents have only a one in 435 chance of becoming a victim of crime. Nice odds, though if you really want to be safe move to Chicago's  Bedford Park community, where only one out of 1,000 residents are likely to be touched by crime. Conversely, the odds are one out of 57 in The Strand/Casino Way, Detroit's "safest neighborhood."

Monday, February 22, 2010

Dunwoody seeks bidders on Comprehensive Transportation Plan.


The City has released the RFP for the Comprehensive Transportation Plan and it will only be with citizen input that this process creates a strategy for funding future capital infrastructure improvements wanted by the citizens therefore I recommend that residents need to be involved and vocal about exactly what they want.  The plan will do the following ...

Inventory and Plan Development
  • Inventory existing conditions including roads, bicycle facilities, pedestrian facilities, transportation services, development policies related to transportation and transportation demand management policies or programs.
  • Develop plans and recommendations for bicycles, pedestrians and other alternative forms of transportation.
  • Develop a prioritized list of transportation projects with estimated costs and recommended funding sources.
  • Produce deliverables including GIS data files and mapping printed at 24” x 36” to summarize existing conditions and show future improvements. Specific maps should include at a minimum:
  • Depiction(s) of existing conditions
  • Road Improvement Plan
  • Sidewalk Improvement Plan, including ADA upgrades
  • Bicycle/ Pedestrian network plan
I guess when it is all over we should be expecting a document much like this that was created for Sandy Springs.

Prior to the City being formed, I served on the Transportation Task Force which worked at putting together a very similar document which outlined the basic needs of the city. For those working on this project, here is most of what we came up with other documents located in the Task Force link above.
Transportation Service Analysis Dunwoody Final.doc
Dunwoody_Sidewalks.pdf
Sidewalk_Data.xls
Dunwoody_Resurfacing.pdf
Map of Dunwoody tied to Plat Maps
City-of-Dunwoody-Pavement-Evaluation (Jan 2010)

I hope the company who wins this project will listen to the residents while also visiting and documenting the conditions on their own to backup and validate the statements of the residents.  Many streets in Dunwoody need sidewalks but my little culdesac isn't Valley View or Happy Hollow where the need is much greater, therefore they shouldn't be ranked the same.  Please be vocal on where your future Dunwoody tax dollars should be spent.  Thanks.

Monday, March 30, 2009

Town Hall Meeting this evening to discuss three options on Dunwoody Club and Spalding Drive

Project Option 2

Sandy Springs Councilman Doug MacGinnitie (who is also running for Secretary of State) will hold a Town Hall Meeting tonight, Monday, March 30th at 5:30 p.m. This meeting will focus on the Dunwoody Club and Spalding Drive intersection improvements and the City budget. It will be followed by a question and answer session.

The meeting will be held at Dunwoody Charter Elementary School at 8100 Roberts Drive in the school's cafeteria. The meeting is scheduled to last ninety minutes.

Project Option 1 - Add a Light

Project Option 2 - Slightly move the intersection, add a light.

Project Option 3 - Drastically move the intersection, add a light.

(For the many regular attendees of the Dunwoody City Council, please take the night off as there is no meeting scheduled for this evening.)

Wednesday, February 18, 2009

Parks bill passes the Senate, Crime happens everywhere, Kudos to the Dunwoody Crier and a Dunwoody billboard lawsuit.

As a new media internet aficionado (i.e. dork), I get much of my news from various internet news sources, yet I am traditional enough to read the AJC every morning on the Marta train to work and read the Dunwoody Crier, cover to cover on Tuesday afternoons when it hits my driveway.

The Crier has recently started to update their website as stories happen and I wanted to publicly thank them for doing so. A couple of weeks ago a story was published well before the print edition and it received numerous comments to their site regarding the story. Today's online edition already has two stories that aren't in this week's print edition and I wanted to make sure that people knew of their availability.

Transfer of Property passes the Senate

The first one is that Senate Bill 58 offered by Dan Weber which would transfer all current county parks to the City of Dunwoody at a reasonable cost and would also force the county to provide the city the $7,000,000 balance of the parks bond referendum, passed the Senate on Tuesday. The full story is available at the Dunwoody Crier.

City Employees victims of crime at Council Meeting.

The second story found on the web but not yet in print is regarding an event that happened late Monday evening. The City Council met in executive session late into the evening and when we departed the cars of the City Manager and the City Clerk had their car windows smashed out and vehicles rummaged through. The entire council was assisting with the clean up, taping up the windows and filling out police reports with a DeKalb Officer (fast response, in case you were wondering) when the Sandy Springs police called to inform us that the suspects were already apprehended. The Crier already has a nice story and the Sandy Springs Neighborhood Watch bulletin is also available here.

Dunwoody's First Lawsuit - Billboards

Since I don't want to dare spread privileged information regarding lawsuits involving the city, Cathy Cobbs of the Crier covered a story that I will usually shy away from and figured that I should at least mention it here as well.

The city of Dunwoody has its first lawsuit. Covenant Media of Georgia has filed a civil action in DeKalb County Superior Court against the city, its development director and a DeKalb County official, claiming that the sign moratorium put into place by the city on December 15 is unconstitutional, and in essence, that Covenant got the run-around when trying to file applications for nine billboards within the city limits.

Sunday, February 15, 2009

Random Thoughts - Radar Signs, Dunwoody Twitter, Neighborhood Watch & Citizens Police Academy

Example of a RadarSign

Speeding has been a topic of this blog for quite awhile therefore I have pursued a number initiatives (passed out Slow Down signs, proposed law changes, installed speed limit signs in Brook Run Park, intersection and cross walk installations, and recently a grant proposal) to affect change. This week I was notified by my good friends at PEDS (Pedestrians Educating Drivers on Safety) that Dunwoody has been chosen as a demonstration project for sign installation. Our Public Works Director, Mr. Richard Meehan has already been in contact with RadarSign regarding possible locations and installation. More information will be forthcoming in several weeks and I will report on it once the installation is complete.

Dunwoody Twitter


The updated City of Dunwoody website has been promised in the next month or so, therefore with the hopes of it having an RSS feed for updates, I reserved the DunwoodyGA twitter account. (Oops, I guess I should tell the City Manager before he reads this on my blog?)

If you are unfamiliar with twitter, think of it as sending a short e-mail to the internet and allowing anyone to read it if they so desire. I created one for my blog and set it up to feed twitter every time I update the blog, other than that I really haven't utilized twitter to its full potential.

If your reading this and have a twitter account, please do me a favor and follow @dunwoodynorth and @DunwoodyGa if you are interested in doing so and I'll follow you back.

http://twitter.com/dunwoodynorth

http://twitter.com/DunwoodyGA

Unincorporated Neighborhood Watch?

Oh how I wish the unincorporated areas of Doraville that voted down the annexation would follow the lead of the Decatur residents by organizing an effective neighborhood watch, but personally I just don't see it happening.

Sandy Springs' Citizens Police Academy

Give the Dunwoody Police Department a little time to get up and running, let us get an effective neighborhood watch program and then I am guessing a year or two down the road that we will be evaluating this Sandy Springs program to see if it could work for us.

Tuesday, December 16, 2008

Sandy Springs follows Chamblee's lead on publishing Crime Stats. Is Dunwoody Next?

The City of Sandy Springs just announced that the City has started using the online crime mapping program offered by Crimereports.com. The City of Chamblee started on the program back in February and I want something like this for Dunwoody.

In fact I campaigned on the issue of open and transparent government and I strongly believe that all crime statistics should be available on line for the citizens who are depending on and paying for the services.

While I am looking at my original list of priorities for Dunwoody, I am reminded that I would like to see financial incentives offered to officers who live within the city limits. This evening the City Manager discussed take home cars for each of the estimated 37 officers and I would prefer to see the money usually spent on gas paid directly to the officer who is willing to make Dunwoody his home.

Retention of every officer in a competitive market is a long-term savings over the additional costs associated with obtaining & hiring new recruits; because of this our compensation and benefit program should be just as competitive and innovative as anyone else out there.


http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=D5u_w3X8L3I

Wednesday, October 8, 2008

AR-50 assault rifle, badge, vest stolen from police car at Perimeter Mall.

Car break ins are very prevalent in Dunwoody but at least the Sandy Springs Police didn't leave the assault rifle sitting on the passenger seat of an unlocked vehicle. I would hate to be the next person arrested at Perimeter Mall for breaking into a vehicle.


http://uk.youtube.com/watch?v=MjMJj29zyXg

Cops’ assault rifle, badge, vest stolen from car
By Marcus K. Garner for the AJC, Oct 08, 2008

A car break-in Tuesday evening in Dunwoody netted thieves an unusual booty — a Sandy Springs police assault rifle, badge and Kevlar vest.

“I think these guys got more than they bargained for,” Sandy Springs police spokesman Lt. Steve Rose said.

A pair of Sandy Springs detectives parked an unmarked police car in a parking deck in Dunwoody near Perimeter Mall while they were on dinner break during their regular shift about 8 p.m. Tuesday, Rose said.

While they were gone, thieves got into the trunk of the car and took the badge, protective vest and AR-50 assault rifle — a lightweight semi-automatic rifle with a light attached to the muzzle. They also took two ammunition magazines with about 30 rounds in each.

Rose speculated that the thieves possibly saw one of the detectives, who he wouldn’t identify, put her purse in the trunk.

The robbers apparently used a screwdriver to force open the latch to one of the car’s rear doors, then opened the trunk from inside the passenger compartment, he said.

Because the forced entry wasn’t apparent, the detectives didn’t immediately realize their car had been burglarized, Rose said. A regionwide alert went out describing the theft.

“We’ve got a couple of leads, and we’ll follow anything we can get,” Rose said. “We want that weapon back or off the street.”

DeKalb County police are leading the criminal investigation. Sandy Springs will conduct an internal investigation.

Rose said he doubted either officer would be disciplined.

“We’ll review any way we could’ve avoided this. It’s just an example. … No one’s immune from theft,” Rose said.

Saturday, July 12, 2008

Dunwoody resident becomes Sandy Springs Acting Police Chief

Dunwoody resident Maj. David Bertrand who is best known by many area children as the funny police officer at All Saints Catholic Church who dresses up as the Easter Bunny, a Christmas Elf or Jolly Ole Saint Nick; has just been named the Acting Police Chief of the City of Sandy Springs.

Bertrand, a graduate of the FBI Academy in Quantico, Va., joined the Sandy Springs police in June 2006. Previously, he served as department major overseeing patrol officers as well as administrative areas.

Best of luck Officer Dave.

http://www.wsbtv.com/news/16864792/detail.html

Saturday, May 10, 2008

Atlanta Business Chronicle - City of Dunwoody would be good for business


The Citizens for Dunwoody task forces are working hard and interviewing various organizations that are related to operating the future City, including organizations like the Perimeter Community Improvement District. The task forces are not only on fact finding missions but I can tell you that they are building coalitions with future stakeholders so that the transition to city hood would be as smooth as possible for all involved.

Friday's Atlanta Business Chronicle has a nice story outlining the relationship between the new City of Sandy Springs and the business community, and the likelihood that the City of Dunwoody would have that same strong working relationship.

http://www.bizjournals.com/atlanta/stories/2008/05/12/story3.html