have been using tax payer dollars to distribute “anti-amendment propaganda” throughout Georgia communities.
The so-called anti-amendment propaganda in question is in regard to the constitutional amendment on the Nov. 6 ballot that would create a state commission with the power to approve charter schools in local communities across the state.
Glen Delk, of Lightmas and Delk, Business and Commercial Attorneys in Atlanta, said he represents a group of tax payers who believe that Barge has been illegally using citizens’ tax dollars to distribute the campaign materials.
However, Dorie Turner Nolt, assistant director of communications for the Georgia Department of Education, said in a statement that Barge’s position was relayed as his personal opinion and not the opinion of the department as a whole.
“We wanted to ensure the public knew that the agency has no position on the amendment based on advice from our attorneys,” Nolt wrote. “…Superintendent Barge made his comments as his personal opinion, not as the agency head. He does still oppose the amendment for reasons he previously cited and stands by those. If asked his opinion on the amendment he will give it, but will not speak to groups exclusively about the amendment, nor has he in the past.”
In other words, Barge will not consent to interviews with the media on the matter.
Delk referenced a Georgia School Boards Association June 2012 meeting that he said was attended by almost every school board member in the state. That meeting, he said, was a training session informing the boards about how to conduct anti-amendment campaigns in their communities and school districts. Delk said he has an audiotape from the meeting.
“Since then, we believe that the teachers union, the state school superintendent and the PTA have been using the schools in the forms of teachers meetings, emails, printing presses, etcetera, to advocate against the passage of this amendment,” he said.
Local response
Floyd County and Rome City school officials said any campaigning done in this community has been done on personal time and finances.
“Nothing is being printed on Rome City paper,” said Gayland Cooper, superintendent for Rome City Schools. “No resources from Rome City Schools are being used to say vote no or yes on the amendment on Nov. 6. As a school system, we’re politically neutral.”
Cooper said the public information meeting conducted last Thursday at the Civic Center was rented using private funds.
“Representatives from around the Northwest Georgia school system, parents, PTO, board members, and superintendents attended to get together and talk about getting the information out to the public,” Cooper said.
David Johnson, a member of the Floyd County Board of Education and past president of the Georgia School Boards Association, said that Floyd County Schools hasn’t used any school funds or time to promote anti-amendment positions.
“Floyd County definitely hasn’t used any tax payer money for promotion and we don’t disseminate information through email networks in favor or against the amendment,” he said. “School boards understand what you can and cannot do.”
The group’s complaint
Delk said last week, his firm sent a “demand” letter to Barge, the state’s board and to local school districts explaining that they had stepped over the line by using public resources, employees and payroll to advocate against the amendment.
Information claiming why the amendment would take control away from local voters and put it into the state’s hands can be found at www.votesmartgeorgia.com/facts, and the website cites its source as the Georgia Department of Education. Delk said there had been anti-amendment documentation on the Georgia Department of Education’s website but it has been removed.
“Last Friday I spoke to Stephen Ritter, who is the assistant attorney general who is handling this matter, and Mr. Ritter confirmed that first, Mr. Barge had agreed to take down the information … that was passed out at this meeting from the website,” Delk said. “We said that’s great but that’s not going far enough.”
Delk maintained that now local school districts are doing a number of activities he thinks violates constitution and state law.
“We believe that our constitution makes it clear that that is not allowed,” he said. “The people of Georgia are entitled not to have their tax dollars used to support a political campaign for one side or the other.”
An investigation has been under way he said.
“Mr. Ritter told me he was conducting an investigation into the activities of the local districts, and we’ve agreed to hold off filing our lawsuit until he and I have a chance to talk probably (today) or Thursday,” Delk said. “Today we found out Mr. Barge not only took it down from the website but they’ve now set (a banner saying) that they’re no longer taking an official position.”
But Delk said that doesn’t end the battle, because he is waiting for the state attorney general’s decision about the actions of local school districts, and particularly, Gwinnett and Fulton counties.
“We’re asking that they voluntarily agree to end it without having to go to court,” he said.
“Mr. Barge seems to be getting there step by step, we contend he’s not there yet. If we have to file suit it’s going to be against one or two districts as representatives of all 180 districts.”
But Cooper said what happens after business hours is his own business.
“My judgement is, anything (that happens) before or after work is my personal time,” he said. “And as a superintendent, as long as I don’t use school system resources to be against or for any political issue, then I am maintaining my neutrality on this issue. But after work or before work or during my lunch break, I’m a citizen and I have a right to communicate my concerns on that amendment.”








I'm tired of getting my head knocked off every year in school tax's. If your family does not use the government schools, You should be able to have yourself removed from that ridiculously high bill tack on to your property tax.
Fine. But leave my tax money with my local board when you go.
It costs about $9,600 a year to educate a kid in Georgia public schools. You didn't pay that on your own.
http://teaching.about.com/od/ProfilesInEducation/a/Georgia-Education.htm
and, oddly enough, my Captcha was "inequality"
Fact of the matter, they are "dumbed down"..
Let kids who are gifted excel and not be held back by lesser minds..Public education is just another Government failure that is contributing to American kids falling behind other nations because everyone gets a "passing" grade.
We line in a country today in which we have created another social class...not upper, not middle, not lower...a class made up of deadbeats who have absolutely no desire to better themselves. They live from government check to government check, doing nothing but smoking cigarettes, drinking beer and making babies...and that's just the womenfolk!
These individuals have, on average, a quadzillion trillion babies out of wedlock, knowing all the while that we, the taxpayers (the 53%), will be funding this incredible lifestyle OF CHOICE, not necessity.
The higher the education a person has...the fewer kids they have...The lower of an education...the larger number of kids. Somethings screwed up with a system when those who cannot afford to have kids have the most. All this gets blended into the population blender...thus, the overall "dumbing down" of American's in general.
A good teacher is worth every dime they get...They put in the extra time, grading endless papers at home on their own time, reading and preparing for lessons, attending/monitoring activities and not getting paid, etc. One thing about my job I once had in a mill...When the day ended, that was it until I came back the next day or after the weekend. Teachers have to carry their work home with them. I've seen some of the overtime hours that some of my family and friends had to do, and it was ridiculous.
What's wagging the tail of public schools are three things...
1. Athletics....Tremendous cost to each system. Just paying the salaries, supplements, healthcare costs, benefits of the coaches is a enormous tax burden. Kids benefit, that's true. But it comes at an overpriced cost. Example: What if (won't ever happen) all sports in all systems in all states went back to being recreation department type things? End result...Parents coach FOR FREE...Also no big shrines for stadiums, no upkeep, no bonds floated, etc. Want to participate? Just pay your $40 recreation department fee for playing, and get a jersey.
2. Special Education....Special Ed is bankrupting the system. The number of teachers, aides, etc. per child is unbelievable! It's really changed through the years. It's not an easy job, and the kids need the help, but it's a major cost today. We've also started labeling kids with every type of "alphabet" disability combination that anyone can think of, from A.D.D. to just B.A.D. Our hearts need to go out to every one of our special needs kids, but we also have to show some kind of financial restraint, too...Won't be possible..See #3.
3. Government over-regulation. The paperwork, reports, filing, requirements, and bureaucratic crap that our educators and administrators put up with is mind-boggling. Thank you, Washington DC, liberals and liberal judges in general, and the ACLU in particular, for this mess-up.
Either way, it still doesn't explain why I pay double the taxes for school that I do for all other government combined and still have to wade through daily fundraisers at school.
It doesn't explain why typically teachers at private schools make less than the government employees who teach most of our children.
I understand that government school teachers must put up with more because they have to endure abuse by our little angels while private schools can just boot them. However, I also understand that private schools have performance standards and government schools can't hardly fire their teachers when they get caught cheating and helping students cheat.
You idiot, $292 X 190 days = $55,480
I get my numbers from the Floyd Co. B O E
The status quo Must be maintained.
The average teacher makes just over $292 a day plus
benefits and gits early retirement. And the school administrators makes a lot more! That's 2 - 3 times
What the people in the private sector make. I can't blame anyone of them for fighting anything that mite change any of that.
Its not about the Kids.
I cheered Gayland Cooper's comments that what he does on his off time is his business. Good thing he's not a police officer, he wouldn't be employed long.
Now Double those taxes and that's the amount you pay for the five local high schools and their feeders. This does not include the daily, year long fundraisers held by the schools.
If I worked in the school system, I'd fight for the status quo too.