Follow us on

Wednesday, June 19, 2013 | 3:26 p.m.

Powered by The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Web Search by YAHOO!
 

Posted: 7:10 p.m. Wednesday, Jan. 23, 2013

DeKalb school system OKs new school construction plan

  • comment(1)

Related

DeKalb school system OKs new school construction plan photo
Johnny Crawford, jcrawford@ajc.com
DeKalb County School buses leave Fernbank Elementary School on Wednesday, January 23, 2013. Fernbank is on a list of DeKalb schools to be rebuilt.
DeKalb school system OKs new school construction plan photo
Johnny Crawford, jcrawford@ajc.com
A woman carries a small child as a student from Fernbank Elementary School crosses the street behind her on Wednesday, January 23, 2013.

By Ty Tagami

The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

The DeKalb County school board on Wednesday authorized a new school construction plan for the next five years, stripping it of controversial elements that outraged parents late last year.

In November, Superintendent Cheryl Atkinson stunned parents, and some school board members, with a school “organization” plan that involved school closures and changes to attendance lines — and a hasty timetable to approve it. One of the most controversial elements involved sending some middle school students to expanded high school campuses.

Parents seethed, and the district reacted.

The plan adopted by a 6-3 vote Wednesday scraps school closures and is silent on major redistricting. Board members made some last-minute modifications that seemed to mollify the last loud pockets of criticism: They ditched a proposal to stretch some elementary schools from fifth to sixth grade, and they dismissed a proposal to convert Chapel Hill Middle School to a “theme” school for select students.

Parent Sonia Farmer characterized that last decision as a qualified victory. Now, her son will be able to attend his neighborhood middle school without worrying about whether he can get in. But overall education levels in south DeKalb, where Chapel Hill Middle is located, still need to rise, she said. “It’s just a small step in the right direction.”

Jennifer Hatfield, the PTA president at Evansdale Elementary in north DeKalb, said the new plan will satisfy parents in her area. The old one called for the closure of nearby Livsey Elementary, a relatively small building tucked into a residential area. The plan also would have shifted some Evansdale students into a different middle school attendance zone.

“It appears they listened to us,” Hatfield said. “They’ve taken out everything that could potentially trigger controversy or opposition.”

DeKalb officials said the new plan had to be completed quickly to qualify for state construction funds. It was previously presented in conjunction with a redistricting plan and a December deadline, but officials then realized two things: they had more time, and they did not have to present a redistricting plan to the state. Thus, the deadline moved, and the talk of large-scale redistricting ceased.

The facilities plan, which will be funded in part by local sales tax revenue, calls for the expansion of several buildings. Austin, Fernbank, Pleasantdale and Rockbridge elementaries will grow to 900 students, while Smoke Rise Elementary expands to 600. McNair Middle will grow to 1,200 students and Chamblee High will expand to 1,600, while several schools will add an undisclosed amount of capacity.

  • comment(1)

More News

 

Today on MyAJC.com

Julio Jones

Falcons close-up: Julio Jones joins Gonzalez’s All-Pro Diet crew

Falcons tight end Tony Gonzalez has written a book called the “All-Pro Diet” and has a convert in Jones, who also does yoga.

Dad receives kidney from daughter

Nice read: Adopted daughter and father — a perfect match

Read this and pass it on: “I really hated the idea of taking a kidney from someone, especially from my daughter.

Opportunity zones thought to bring jobs

Your tax dollars: Council shocked by late request for millions to lure business

The reason for the last-minute budget increase: Atlanta recruiters may have been making commitments they otherwise wouldn’t be able to keep.

Mark Arum Weekend Construction outlook

Updated every Friday, Mark Arum tells us where we can find construction, events and anything else to slow us down on the roads this weekend.