The times. (Gainesville, Ga.) 1972-current, December 06, 2018, Image 1
$1.00 THURSDAY, DECEMBER 6, 2018 GAINESVILLE, GEORGIA | gainesvilletimes.com Honestly Local Work to begin on new Enota garden Ground-breaking at historic Smartville site scheduled to happen within next month BY JOSHUA SILAVENT jsilavent@gainesvilletimes.com The Gainesville City Schools Board of Education this week signed off on a project to resurrect the historic Smartville Garden at the new Enota Multiple Intelligences Academy. Adrian Niles, chief operations offi cer, said he expects to break ground on the project within the next month and finish this spring. “That’s our goal,” he added. Ryan Thompson, a member of the Gainesville Planning and Appeals Board, chaired a “garden commit tee” to review and determine how the project should be designed and at what cost. Thompson had a few vested inter ests in the project. First, he has two children attending Enota. Secondly, he is the co-founder of Pro Touch Landscapes in Gaines ville, so he knows a thing or two about landscape design and architecture. “I’ve been in this business for a long time, too,” Thompson said, adding that the garden committee had three “talented” firms design projects for consideration. Thompson said that members of the committee, which included par ents, teachers, administrators and Enota alumni, liked aspects from all three and asked the firms to work together to incorporate the best aspects of each design. “It was good for the school, good for (the architects), good for everyone,” Thompson said. The win-win scenario retains some of the traditional aspects of the origi nal Smartville, such as the water tower, which was demolished to make way for the new $19 million, state-of- the-art school that opened this fall. And plants that were harvested from the former site and nourished elsewhere while the new school was constructed will be brought back. Thompson said that while the gar den committee had to consider bud get parameters, he feels good about providing new additions for group ■ Please see GARDEN, 8A Resurrecting the historic Smartville Garden at the new Enota Multiple Intelligences Academy in Gainesville will likely occur over multiple phases, according to school officials. FILE PHOTO The Times Denny’s kills their Gainesville grill JEFF GILL I The Times The Denny’s at 1701 Browns Bridge Road in Gainesville has closed, the sixth restaurant to do so on the site since 1997. Restaurant closing means Browns Bridge Road site vacant — BY JEFF GILL jgill@gainesvilletimes.com What’s up with 1701 Browns Bridge Road in Gainesville? Six restaurants have come and gone from the location since 1997 — the latest being Denny’s, which closed three weeks ago. Rio Bravo was the first eatery on the site, replac ing what had been a mobile home sales lot. The prop erty was annexed into Gainesville in 1996 as a res taurant location, said Matt Tate, Gainesville’s plan ning manager. Following Rio Bravo was Up the Creek in 2001, Smokey Bones in 2003, Sweet Fire Lodge in 2008 and Shooter’s Tavern in 2010. Asked why he thought the restaurant site had so much turnover, Tate said, “It makes no sense con sidering the neighboring restaurants .. have done well.” Along the same stretch are Applebee’s, Red Lobster, LongHorn and O’Charleys. The restaurant site is across from Gainesville Towne Center shopping center, which has several restaurants, including Golden Corral and Panda Express, which are under construction. Also nearby are long standing Pizza Hut and Taco Bell. “I am only speculating, but it seems there have been management issues throughout the years,” Tate said. “I believe a nation ally known restaurant that is managed well could do well there.” RWDT Foods, founded again by two former NFL play ers, owned the Denny’s restaurant in Gainesville. Officials there couldn’t be reached for comment. When the Denny’s opened in November 2013, co-owner Donnell Thomp son said he hoped to defy the property’s history. “It’s not necessarily the building you’re in. It’s the brand that you represent,” he said. “People come to (Denny’s). (The chain) is 60 years old. We’re one of the oldest brands out there; we’re the brand that you can’t kill.” Bank robbery suspect finally in custody BY NICK WATSON nwatson@gainesvilletimes.com A Cleveland man who allegedly stole thousands of dollars from a Clermont bank is now in Hall County’s cus tody after he was detained in Colorado, according to authorities. Michael Anthony Gordon, 48, was wanted by the Hall County Sheriff’s Office in the 2017 robbery at United Community Bank on Cleveland Highway. According to authorities, Gordon allegedly showed a gun and a note to the United Commu nity Bank tellers before leaving with roughly $2,059. No one was injured in the incident. Deputies responded to the silent panic alarm at the Cleveland High way bank at 10:22 a.m. April 5.2017. Gordon also alleg edly robbed a bank in Cornelia three weeks later. On June 1, 2017, Gordon was arrested in Colorado. “He was stopped on a rou tine traffic stop as we under stand it, then arrested on the warrants,” Sheriff’s Office Lt. Scott Ware wrote in an email. Gordon was transferred to Habersham County in June 2017, and the Hall County Sheriff’s Office took custody of Gordon Tuesday, Dec. 4. He was charged with armed robbery, possession of a firearm by a convicted felon and possession of a fire arm during the commission of a crime. No bond has been set. Gordon Pa. school says coach arrested in Hall County had clean record BY NICK WATSON nwatson@gainesvilletimes.com The president of an Erie, Pennsylvania, school sent a letter to parents regarding a coach’s arrest in Hall County, saying he had passed all background checks before joining the school. Scott Jabo wrote Dec. 3 to the parents of students at Cathedral Preparatory School, Villa Maria Academy and Mother Teresa Academy regarding Gregory Man- cini, a man who was charged in Hall County with criminal attempt to com mit child molestation. The Hall County Sheriff’s Office released information on his arrest Dec. 4. “Prior to his arrest, there were never any reports of inappropriate behaviors with minors. Also, he had passed all of the required background checks before working with our school. Those back ground checks include the Pennsylvania child abuse background checks, FBI fingerprinting, and Pennsyl vania criminal background checks, in addition to satis fying all other state mandates related to the protection of children and the requirements of the Diocese of Erie’s child protection policy,” according to Jabo’s letter. Mancini allegedly had sexually charged online conversations with a 13-year-old Hall County boy through the shooter game Fortnite on Xbox and tried to meet him, according to authorities. The boy told his mother who then reported it to law enforcement Oct. 23 “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 contin ued, 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 the Dec. 4 news release. Mancini was arrested Nov. 3. Jabo said Mancini had worked with the school “in limited capacities over the years, most recently as an assistant basketball coach for Cathedral Prep.” “He was also a substitute teacher for Cathedral Prep and Villa Maria Academy, but he has not been involved in that capacity since 2015,” Jabo wrote. Jabo’s letter said Mancini can not associate with the school and its students until the case is resolved. Mancini’s attorney Arturo Corso declined to com ment Tuesday, Dec. 4, when the details of the arrest were released. ‘Prior to his arrest, there were never any reports of inappropriate behaviors with minors. Also, he had passed all of the required background checks before working with our school.’ Scott Jabo president, Cathedral Preparatory School □ 40901 06835 8 INSIDE Advice 4B Get Out 6A Bridge 4B Lottery 2A Business 3B Opinion 4A Calendar 2A Our Region 8A Classified B6 Sports 1B Comics 5B TV/puzzles 4B WEATHER 2A High Low IP 48 35 Lake Lanier level: 1,070.72 feet Full pool 1,071. Down 0.21 feet in 24 hours DEATHS 9A Patsy Wilson Allbright, 66 William A. Anderton III, 69 Frank James Bell, 65 Larry Townsend DePriest, 78 Judith Canady Dodge, 77 Mary Willene (Poss) Gipson, 57 Ralph Donald Hadaway Jr., 59 Dorothy Bennett McClure, 97 Bobby John McMahan, 85 Wanda Ruth Mitchell, 80 Buford Oglesby, 73 Sam Scaffide, 76