by Maggie Lee
DeKalb County School System Interim Superintendent Ramona Tyson presented her plan for school closures and redistricting to a crowd of more than 200 at a county board of education in Stone Mountain on Monday night. She wants to close eight schools, down from a previous proposal of 14. The I-20 corridor would lose the most.
Five elementary schools in the south-central part of the county are on the chopping block this summer: Sky Haven and Gresham Park along I-20; and Peachcrest, Glen Haven and Atherton, all near I-285 and Covington Highway.
Surrounding schools would absorb those students for the next few years. Ultimately, though, DeKalb is looking at creating consolidated elementary schools in some of those neighborhoods to serve as many as 900 students.
In Avondale, the high school would remain the DeKalb School of the Arts and the middle school would be shuttered and perhaps one day reopen as something else.
Medlock Elementary School, off Scott Boulevard in north DeKalb would also close.
In each case, nearby school districts shift slightly around the edges to accommodate the closures. A total of nearly 9,000 students– that’s 9 percent of the total –would be affected.
Tyson’s plan doesn’t rule out more closures after the end of the 2011-12 school year. At least four schools are still on the line: Livsey, Bob Mathis, Rock Chapel and Toney elementary schools, as well as Wadsworth and Kittredge magnets.
Kevin Griffin, whose daughter has already graduated Southwest DeKalb High School, is nonetheless following the months-long trudge to redraw school borders and scrap the approximately 11,000 empty seats in southern DeKalb schools while dealing with increasing overcrowding toward the north. Griffin said he’s not convinced the schools “are staying on the focus of our children.” He asked rhetorically how much money is spent in DeKalb on trips or other unnecessary expenses, adding that he sympathizes with principals whose hands are tied by too many county rules.
A mom from Briarlake Elementary on LaVista Road said she’s pleased with the proposal. “They kept our feeder plan intact,” said Whitney Blackmore. “I think they listened, made something that worked.”
The redraws and closures would save some $12.4 million annually, according to Tyson’s presentation. It also assures full state funding–some monies are cut off to elementary schools that serve fewer than 450 students or any school less than three-quarters full. More than 20 schools fell below one or the other of those bars.
There will be no layoffs, said board chairmain Thomas Bowen. “The resources will follow the child,” he explained.
At least one group of very active parents apparently got the draft changed to suit them.
Before the meeting, in the cold rain outside, about 20 men gathered under umbrellas and their protest signs, angry because their apartments at a complex called Jefferson at Perimeter in Dunwoody would shift from Vanderlyn Elementary to Dunwoody Elementary under the plan. They alleged that such a line is unfair to apartment-dwellers and cordoned off Vanderlyn exclusively for people who live in houses.
They talked of such a line being something perhaps worthy of a lawsuit. But apparently they can breathe easy. When a consultant presented Tyson’s proposed north side map, he said it’s not exactly as envisioned in an earlier draft. One obvious change? The red cordon that outlines Vanderlyn’s district pokes out a little differently, encircling Jefferson at Perimeter.
The school board is scheduled to vote on the redistricting at its March 7 meeting. There are two public hearings in the meantime, March 1 and March 3 both at 6:30 p.m. at school headquarters, 1701 Mountain Industrial Boulevard in Stone Mountain.
Tucker is a better place because of Mr. Agee.
He was suspended for choking a kid at basketball game and was almost fired. He was forced to go to anger managment classes in order to keep his job. He was unable to get a job outside of Dekalb County because he had been investigated not only for sexual harrassment but charged with assaulting a student a gym full of parents at a basketball game. He was promoted because he was friendly so to speak with the right people who were willing to push him off on Columbia High School. The fact that he has torn the school down is of no surprise to anyone who has ever crossed his path. He has been built up to believe that he was untouchable or was he set up because whomever thought he could run a school had to be delusional. It will be nice to see this situation cleaned up as what goes around always comes right back on around and there will be some of us who will dance with glee when they walk him to curb and kick him out.
Uras Agee has a degree in Special Ed. as of 1995 from Tennessee where he has taught and coach a total of 7 years for schools in TN and GA. All High Schools. Uras Age never taught Middle Schools.
Oh, but you forgot to mention that the sexual harrasment complaint was thrown out and turned out to be a false alarm. It seems there is a problem when th focus is more on negative calls versus the students and their academics. Some teachers are so worried about changes and how it may affect them versus being concerned about not meeting AYP and preparing students with a successful education. Unity has never been at Columbia High School and I wonlder why the school cannot keep leaders or administrators there long...Maybe it is time to unify the school and come together for the students. Not about you...but about the students. That is really what education is about correct? I hope so. What is the qualification for teachers in DeKalb that call themselves the breakfast club 10-12 teachers that meet up at 6:30 i the mornings to plot against others? HATERS and PEOPLE WHO DON'T CARE ABOUT low achieving students, but they do care about the high achievers only and want to stay in there square little box.
http://www.ajc.com/news/dekalb/23-000-in-dekalb-833056.html
Schools' audits find evidence of theft
And this:
Uras Agee III was selected as Principal of Columbia High School for this school year. Area Director, Ralph Simpson, pushed hard for him. This is Agee's first job as a principal. He had been assistant principal for three years at Tucker High. Guess what! Look him up on the Certification Channel. You'll see that the Most Recent Ethics Actions against him was a suspension from 8/27/2004 until 9/2/2004.
I hear that a female teacher filed a Sexual Harrassment Complaint against him in 2006 at Tucker High. The County still chose him as Principal in 2010.
Guess what! A couple of weeks ago at a faculty meeting, Agee was so worked up that he picked up a chair and slammed it down, he beat his fists on the table, threw Transfer Papers at the faculty, screamed that the staff was bad, not him, that the County wanted him to get rid of the bad staff, and he slammed the door leaving.
Why was he upset? A teacher had helped a parent file a Sexual Harrassment Complaint against the new assistant principal Agee had hired. This guy is Jay Cunningham's son. His name is Jonathan Woods. This is his first stab at administration also. Look him up on the Certification Channel.
Agee and Woods were trained in the early 2000s for middle school education. They have been in the classroom maybe three years each. The qualification for leadership advancement in DeKalb? Special Education training and a penchant for sexual harrassment!
Only one Elected Official was doing his homework and realized that the DeKalb BOE had not taken advantage of and lost out on 25 MILLION DOLLARS that might have saved these Schools from closing. That Representative was Fran Millar. Remember that News just this last year.
All other Elected Officials when it has comes to Education in DeKalb County = Not Worth Two Dead Flies !!!
When you child is living with you and they are 30-40 years old and can't find a job because of the Poor Education they got in DeKalb County just pat yourself on the back, for you voted for these IDIOTS !!!
It's like Crawford Lewis never left