Acworth awaits word on All-America City title
by Katy Ruth Camp
krcamp@mdjonline.com
June 18, 2010 12:00 AM | 1823 views | 5 5 comments | 14 14 recommendations | email to a friend | print
Suzi Riedling of Acworth watches Mayor Tommy Allegood begin the city s presentation during the All-America City competition at Acworth City Hall on Thursday afternoon. Mayor Allegood and other representatives of the city are currently in Kansas City, Mo, competing to be selected in the final 10 for the All-America City recognition.<br>Photo by Laura Moon
Suzi Riedling of Acworth watches Mayor Tommy Allegood begin the city's presentation during the All-America City competition at Acworth City Hall on Thursday afternoon. Mayor Allegood and other representatives of the city are currently in Kansas City, Mo, competing to be selected in the final 10 for the All-America City recognition.
Photo by Laura Moon
slideshow
ACWORTH - A group of 42 delegates from Acworth made an inspiring presentation before a panel of judges Thursday afternoon in Missouri as the city seeks to become a 2010 National Civic League All-America City.

The city was selected as one of 27 finalists for the All-America Cities competition in April, largely based on its city-sponsored programs that assist Acworth's youth. Many of the children in the programs are among the 42 delegates - along with Acworth City Council members, religious leaders and program directors - who traveled to Kansas City on Wednesday to represent the city. Back home, a crowd of about 30 residents gathered at Acworth City Hall to watch the presentation being broadcasted live.

The ten winners will be announced at an awards ceremony tonight.

After representatives from North Miami, Fla., finished their presentation around noon Thursday, a sea of red shirts being worn by the Acworth delegates flooded the stage chanting "Acworth, Georgia!"

"Are all of these people from Acworth, Georgia? That's wonderful," one of the judges said into her microphone.

Mayor Tommy Allegood opened the presentation, which highlighted the community's commitment to helping children succeed.

"We've tripled our population and became the fastest-growing city in Georgia," Allegood said. "And while we were focusing on economic development efforts to protect our quality of life, we decided we needed to design programs for our community to invest in our children's lives."

The NCL competition requires applicants to document three community projects that address local challenges. Acworth chose the Horizon Field, which is the baseball and softball field specially designed to serve children with special needs; the Expanding Horizons Program, which uses local donations to fund educational trips for students who rarely, if ever, get to travel outside city limits; and the Acworth Achievers After School and Mentoring Program, which offers after-school opportunities for students.

Marlon Longacre, pastor of Community Development at Acworth's NorthStar Church, stood by his wife, Libby, and their Autistic son, Matthew, as the father and pastor spoke of the impact Horizon Field has had on Matthew's life since it opened last April.

"As Matthew grew, we noticed the need to bridge the gap with special needs families and sports opportunities," Longacre said. "Five years later, we get to witness the joy of him participating in sports with his buddies. The progress we see in Matthew is absolutely inspiring."

Cobb County has 15,000 children with special needs, Longacre said, and the community raised $1.25 million in donations for the only special needs field in the county. The field's league already has 155 participants and 255 volunteers.

Acworth ended its program by holding signs with pictures and slogans representing what living in Acworth means to them. One student's sign that read, "First to go to college." Major Wayne Dennard with the Acworth Police Department held up a sign that said, on one side, "Police officer on weekdays," and on the other side, "Coach on the weekends."

After the program, one judge said, "There needs to be a new rule of not making the jury cry. You're a community of heart, and we see that."

Another judge said, "You have an amazing story to tell. We get too bogged down about infrastructure and politics, but when you think of our kids, we've given them parks and recreation activities. But you've given them the greatest gift of all: love."

Clarence and Sonja Robinson of Acworth watched the presentation live in the Acworth City Hall Council Room and said the presentation made them proud to be residents of the city they've lived in for 36 years.

"We raised our three sons here, and there are so many dedicated people in our city who are trying to do the right thing and raise our children up to be caring and successful," Sonja Robinson said. "This is such a wonderful city. That looked like a winner, to me."

Allegood said residents and businesses donated $35,000 to pay for the delegates to make the trip and that no taxpayer money was used.
Comments
(5)
Comments-icon Post a Comment
relady
|
June 19, 2010
This took a lot of work by all adults and children involved in this event, plus a lot of community involvement to make it happen. Way to go, Acworth! What a great place to live!
Worthless
|
June 19, 2010
Hooey, your comments are accurate. As an employee of city of Marietta, I can tell you that the title is nothing more than a bragging right. It does nothing for people who live in Marietta and it was really nothing more than a free trip for some of the chosen few.
ProudCitizen
|
June 18, 2010
The entire Acworth community has a vision to make the community a superb place to live, work and raise a family. City government, schools, citizens groups and volunteers all share a common goal. To be recognized as one of ten All-America Cities is certainly a feather in the cap for the whole community.
Hooey
|
June 18, 2010
After all the hooey and applesauce the City of Marietta had over the title I am still not sure what, if anything, it actually did beside give a few from City Hall a free trip to San Diego to party.
chesucat
|
June 18, 2010
Acworth has come a long way from being the red headed stepchild of Cobb County.
*All comments are subject to moderator approval before being made visible on the website. The use of profanity, obscene and vulgar language, hate speech, and racial slurs is strictly prohibited. Advertisements, promotions, spam, and links to outside websites will be rejected.