The times. (Gainesville, Ga.) 1972-current, December 05, 2018, Image 1
WEDNESDAY, DECEMBER 5, 2018 | $1.00 | GAINESVILLE, GEORGIA | gainesvilletimes.com Have a craving for a sweet, milk-and-tea drink with gummy, chewy pearls of tapioca? Danny’s Donuts is the place to be. LIFE, 4B Honestly Local FLOWERY BRANCH Apartments, retail project pitched City to co-host open house meetings to discuss downtown development BY JEFF GILL jgill@gainesvilletimes.com An Atlanta developer’s ambitious plans for Flowery Branch will be on display for residents this week. The Residential Group is hosting an open house today concerning plans for downtown redevelopment. The company is proposing to turn prop erty now occupied by the former City Hall and police station on Main Street between Railroad Avenue and Church Street into a multi-use development fea turing 15 apartments and 7,700 square feet of ground-level retail. The open house will take place at 6 p.m. in the old City Hall, 5517 Main St. And then, on Thurs day, Dec. 6, Flowery Branch City Coun cil will consider The Residential Group’s request to rezone a long-vacant 37-acre site off Phil Niekro Boulevard for a proposed 324-unit apartment complex. As for the open house, “it’s really (the developer’s) meeting,” City Manager Bill Andrew said. “We’re just helping co-host it. We’ll be there to answer questions and all that.” Kurt R. Alexander, principal for The Residential Group, couldn’t be reached for comment this week. Flowery Branch City Council voted Nov. 15 to approve $5 million from tax allocation district money to offset ■ Please see FLOWERY, 6A Andrew Open house What: Downtown redevelopment project proposed by Atlanta-based The Residential Group When: 6 p.m. Wednesday, Dec. 5, and 6 p.m. Dec. 19 Where: 5517 Main St., Flowery Branch More info: 770-967-6371 Proposed rezoning What: The Residential Group, an Atlanta-based developer, is seeking a rezoning to allow for a 324-unit apartment complex on Phil Niekro Boulevard When: 6 p.m. Thursday, Dec. 6 Where: Flowery Branch City Flail, 5410 Pine St. More info: 770-967-6371 orflowerybranchga.org Updating government access Photos by SCOTT ROGERS I The Times Hall County Public Information Officer Katie Crumley visits the TV 18 editing suite Tuesday, Dec. 4, at the Hall County Government Center. Hall County and Gainesville announced Monday, Dec. 3, that its joint video production team will phase out cable broadcasts and move toward a more “online-driven video content model.” Gainesville man charged with killing his mother BY LAYNE SALIBA lsaliba@gainesvilletimes.com A Gainesville man was charged Monday with killing his mother after she was found in her home with a gunshot wound to the head. Linda Arrington, 69, of Gainesville, was found by her husband around 6:30 a.m. in their Skyview Drive home off Ahaluna Drive. Robert Timo thy Stargel, 54, is charged with murder. “Deputies and paramedics responded to the residence where it was determined that foul play was suspected in the death,” wrote Lt. Scott Ware of the Hall County Sheriff’s Office, in a news release. Stargel was arrested in the 1600 block of Oak Brook Drive, although Ware said he was living at the Skyview Drive address. The number listed for the Skyview Drive address was disconnected when called Tuesday by The Times. Stargel was booked into the Hall County Jail on Monday afternoon. The case remains under investigation. Stargel TV-18 will be replaced with more online, social media content BY JOSHUA SILAVENT jsilavent@gainesvilletimes.com Gainesville and Hall County govern ments are shifting to provide more social media and online streaming con tent to residents as they plan to pull the plug on the local government access channel, TV-18, at the end of the year. The move follows the retirement this year of Gainesville spokeswoman Catiel Felts and TV-18 manager Ronny Childs. The two had been responsible for much of the production and content that aired on the channel, including city council and county commission meetings. “Ronny did incredible things for the city of Gainesville and Hall County,” said Hall County spokeswoman Katie Crumley. Their departures, however, left local officials to examine how to move for ward and whether to “alter or rein vent” TV-18. Crumley said the county and city took a survey from residents and “the feedback we received is that (people) are not watching traditional cable as much.” Some cable providers also do not offer TV-18. Additionally, most respondents pre ferred receiving information online and through social media, Crumley said, while TV-18 was more focused on longer-form content to fill 30-minute or hour-long segments. So, that means turning to more online content to “meet people where they are,” she added. One thing that won’t change: City council and county commission meet ings will still be recorded and broad cast on the local government websites. “We want to make clear that (resi dents) will still have access,” Crumley said. “We’re going to continue to do that.” Hall County has already hired Brian Stewart, a reporter and radio host at AccessWDUN in Gainesville, to fill a digital media specialist role to support more web content production, press releases, newsletters, graphic design and photography. Expanding local government’s messaging, which could include pub lic meeting information and special events, through new mediums like Facebook Live should remain a budget- neutral proposition, Crumley said. TV-18 costs about $250,000 annually to operate, split between the city and county governments, and Crumley said she expects savings to come in the years ahead. ‘We want to make clear that (residents) will still have access. We’re going to continue to do that.’ Katie Crumley, Hall County Public Information Officer Man accused of trying to meet boy via Fortnite game BY NICK WATSON nwatson@gainesvilletimes.com A Pennsylvania man and former basketball coach allegedly had sexually charged online conversations with a 13-year-old Hall County boy through the online game Fortnite and tried to meet him, according to authorities. What he didn’t know was that a Hall County Sheriff’s Office detective assumed the boy’s online identity after the 13-year-old told his mother who then reported it to law enforcement Oct. 23. The boy and Gregory Man- cini, 29, of Erie, Pennsylvania, played the shooter game Fort nite on Xbox and communi cated through the console’s headset. “Over the course of several weeks, the two began to video chat, and the man turned the conversation to sexual subject matter. As the contact continued, the man said that he planned to travel to metro Atlanta and wanted to meet with the boy,” Sheriff’s Office spokesman Der- reck Booth wrote in a Dec. 4 news release. On Nov. 2, the Multi-Agency Narcotics Squad investigators contacted Mancini, who said he was in the Atlanta area. “I believe this guy was coming to Atlanta for other business... or maybe to visit other family in the state of Georgia,” Lt. Don Scalia said. The sheriff’s office reported Mancini became ■ Please see GAME, 6A Mancini INSIDE WEATHER 2A 0 40901 06835 Business 3B Calendar 2A Classified 7B Opinion 4A Sports 1B 8 TV/puzzles 5B High Low fp43 26 Lake Lanier level: 1,070.93 feet Full pool 1,071. Down 0.11 feet in 24 hours DEATHS 7A Linda Susan Arrington, 69 Lois Lingerfelt Beck Arthur, 87 Frank James Bell, 65 Ethelyn Savage Brock, 82 Howard Lee Carnes, 83 Carlos Cobb, 32 Christopher John Corless, 39 Pedro Escalera, 72 Gina Leigh Faulk, 49 Ralph Hadaway, 59 Dorothy Gail Hall, 58 Jeffery Allen Hughes, 57 John Humphries, 91 John Richard Ingrisano, 68 Richard Landy, 87 Morris Allen McCall, 75 Bobby John McMahan, 85 Simion Medrea, 77 David Mele, 68 Kimberly Jaye Moore, 20 Cecil E. Murphy, 75 Roshan Lai Sharma, 83 Clifton Avery Stroud, 86 Mildred Fowler Wood, 95