Former electoral opponents met Tuesday as FVCS held
its final meeting,
with Rusty Griffin, Vice-Chair of CUEE,
watching at the MLK Monument as
Sam Allen, President of Friends of
Valdosta Schools (FVCS) announced the dissolution of FVCS.
In addition to FVCS regulars such as JC Cunningham,
Chamber Chair Tom Gooding was there,
as were current Valdosta Mayor Sonny Vickers and
Mayor-Elect John Gayle, plus re-elected Valdosta City Council At-Large Ben Norton.
Valdosta School Superintendent Cason was there.
I didn't see Lowndes Superintendent Smith,
although various members of
Sam Allen demonstrates Valdosta City and Lowndes County
School Boards cooperate, right there at the Board of Elections last night.
As he said, a 4 to 1 victory against 10 to 1 financial odds
proves grassroots organizing works.
It's OK, to be beat. But to be beat by a one-armed man....
People say we don't talk —Sam Allen 8 Nov 2011
Victory Celebration,
Vote No for Consolidation, Friends of Valdosta City Schools (FVCS),
Valdosta, Lowndes County, Georgia, 8 Nov 2011.
Videos by George Boston Rhynes for K.V.C.I., the bostongbr on YouTube.
Absolutely amazing! The grass roots effort, outspent by a 10 to 1 margin,
defeat the CUEE effort by 4 to 1! That's what it's all about! This is
what democracy looks like!
Thanks to all the put in the time and effort and showed up at the
polls. Now I hope we can have a serious discussion about the education
of our children in Valdosta. Y'all in the county can, too.
Not this time. Not Now. How about not ever after a 4 to 1 loss?
79.07% No Consolidation with 14 out of 16 precincts. All that is outstanding is provisional ballots and military, which are usually a handful. The percentage of no votes kept going up. Also more people voted on the school consolidation referendum than there were validated signatures on CUEE's petition.
It looked like a landslide, and it was:
In other news, the mayoral vote almost voted that of four years ago. John W. Gayle will be the new Mayor of Valdosta with 57.3%.
Ben H. Norton retains his Valdosta City Council Seat with 76.56%.
Sunday sales of alcohol in Valdosta won with 52.3%. A similar alcohol referendum won in Lake Park with 65.99%.
It looks like Ben Futch will be the new Mayor of Lake Park with 54.85%.
Sandy Sherrill, Russell H. Lane, Paul Mulkey, and Roanald Carter will apparently be on the Lake Park City Council.
In Dasher, Edwin R. Smith will be City Council P3 and Donald J. Bryan will be P2.
In Hahira, Ralph Clendenin retains his City Council seat.
Sam Allen offered his head as a
crystal ball.
Dr. Smith replied it wasn't clear enough.
Everybody laughed at that as this video started, in which Allen, president of
Friends of Valdosta City Schools (FVCS), and former
superintendent of Valdosta City Schools, asked several
questions, most of which Dr. Smith would have had to have had
a crystal ball to answer.
The questions included what will happen to certain programs,
and what will happen to Valdosta School SPLOST funds.
Lowndes County School System Attorney Warren Turner did clarify a bit of what
would happen if consolidation passes:
If consolidation occurs, there is no such thing as the Valdosta
City School System, from the date the Georgia Secretary of State approves it.
Once they certify the election, there is no
central office of the Valdosta City School System.
There is a property located on William Street that is part of the
Lowndes County School System....
The real question is where would the funds desginated for those facilities go,
and can you even spend it?
Tax Commissioner doesn't know; Attorney General doesn't know; and we don't know.
What will happen to programs and SPLOST? —Sam Allen @ LCBOE 4 October 2011
Why we oppose consolidation,
Community Forum, Lowndes County Board of Education (LCBOE),
Valdosta, Lowndes County, Georgia, 4 October 2011.
Videos by Gretchen Quarterman for LAKE, the Lowndes Area Knowledge Exchange.
The VDT this morning left out all the best parts of last night's
exchange between Matt Portwood and Lowndes County Commission Chairman
Ashley Paulk.
We'll have the video up shortly so you can see for yourself.
The question:
"Reading the news, I found that both school boards and the City Council
have come out with either a statement or a resoultion with their stance
on school consolidation.
I'm just curious why there hasn't been a statement or resolution from you,"
said Portwood.
The VDT's version of the answer:
"Look at your tax notes.
It says county taxes and school taxes," replied Paulk.
We're two totally different entities than the county school system.
I don't feel like we should be meddling in their affairs.
I don't think the County Commission should be weighing in on the city issue.
Commissioners agreed that this was their stance on the matter."
From: Karen Noll
To: chamber@valdostachamber.com
Cc: [many other people]
Dear Mr. Gooding and Chamber of Commerce,
In response to
your most recent correspondence, I dare say many ask why the
Chamber has such a single focus on an unproven plan with little or no
supporting data. Yet again your answers to the many questions about the
reasons that the Chamber is acting in this manner are insufficient and
demonstrate quite clearly that you are steadfastly working to undermine the
very community you claim to support.
Maybe it is my academic background, but I will use data to support my
assertions and hopefully rectify some of the misinformation that has been
so disruptive to this community, a discussion of a very important issue:
the education of our children.
12th out of 16
factors in importance to businesses coming to our community. The
Chamber's
own survey revealed that a low crime rate and the business friendliness of
the local agencies were most important to businesses in 2009.
Our community sadly hosts a large population of children living in poverty,
and education is the best avenue to future success. For this reason, I am
very pleased to report that our economically disadvantaged students in
Valdosta City Schools met or exceeded the expected CRCT scores for the
district last year. This is no small feat and we have some very dedicated
educators to thank for this achievement.
Furthermore, research shows that "larger district size has been shown to be
negatively associated with the achievement of impoverished
students" (
Howley, C. 1996). This means that the fantastic achievements of
our most disadvantaged students will be reversed in a larger district and
all of the hard work of VCS educators will be lost in order to create, as
you claim, "one great public school system".
Two years ago the city school district asked Chamber members to provide
input on their Strategic Improvement Plan through an online survey. Only
5.2% of responses came from Chamber members. Valdosta City Schools
encouraged input from all stakeholders, yet these Chamber members in large
part did not respond. Now the Chamber claims to have THE solution for the
schools they had no time for when asked for feedback.
Research consistently shows that bigger does not mean better in education.
So, 'combining our resources' does not bring more money, better
educational outcomes, or cost savings. According to the
Lowndes County
Board of Education consolidation would put a number of teachers out of
work. That would mean fewer customers in local businesses and less tax
revenue. In other words, school consolidation would negatively impact our
local economy and its businesses.
The Chamber is acting irresponsibly toward this community and the children
served by the Valdosta City Schools. I am again appalled by the
callousness of this organization, the petty name calling and repeated
misinformation. It is crystal clear that CUEE and the Chamber are not
interested in what is best for our children.
As a positive and strong community we will rise above the bad apple that
misbehaves and move forward because it is the right thing to do, and we
will continue to model appropriate behavior to our children. At the same
time, we as a community must remember the lesson we have learned today:
'greed can blind'. We are called to reach out to and to help those in
need. We will continue to work together as a community and work toward the
brightest future for our children.
Thank you, Mr. Gooding, for reminding us again of the path we are called to
take.
Video of the open forum Tuesday night at Lowndes High School
where the Lowndes County Board of Education thoroughly addressed
new evidence found by both them and CUEE.
Partly through the information they presented at
their previous forum of 4 October,
they provoked dialog with CUEE in the form of several email
messages from consolidation proponents distributed by the Chamber of Commerce.
At Tuesday's forum the Lowndes board and staff took CUEE's messages
as questions, looked up the answers (for example, how much did
taxes rise in places where there was school consolidation recently?)
and worked the result into their own computations.
The general answer is still that consolidation wouldn't improve
education and would raise property taxes to near the state-mandated
cap, yet that wouldn't be enough to preserve all the existing
school programs, and teachers and staff would also have to be
let go.
So the Lowndes Board and the Valdosta board
(several VBOE members plus Supt. Cason were present, and one repeated point was
that the two school boards and staff talk to each other all the time)
used CUEE's questions to improve the case
against consolidation while promoting community dialog.
They even managed to criticize specific named individuals
for specific messages
Update 12:55 3 Nov 2011:LCBOE's own video of their 1 November open forum on Financial Issues of Consolidation is now available on YouTube.
Apparently there are still many people out there who don't know much
about school consolidation.
A quick yet comprehensive way to find out is to read the
Grassroots Handbook Against School Consolidation
by David Mullis.
See also the statements against consolidation by
both school boards.
Many citizens spoke at the
29 August 2011 VBOE meeting
where all but one Valdosta School Board member
voted for the statement against consolidation.
VBOE then held three open forums:
This was the first of three forums on school consolidation
hosted by the Valdosta Board of Education.
It was at Valdosta High School on 8 September 2011.
VBOE School Consolidation Forum @ VHS 8 September 2011
education, schools, referendum, consolidation, unification,
Forum at Valdosta High School, Valdosta Board of Education (VBOE),
Valdosta, Lowndes County, Georgia, 9 September 2011.
Videos by Gretchen Quarterman for LAKE, the Lowndes Area Knowledge Exchange.
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