County School Boards
spend most of their money on building new schools. The Georgia Legislature
currently requires new schools to hold 900 students. School Districts use Bonds
to fund construction and this doubles the cost of the project. School Boards are controlled by the District
office bureaucracy.
Austin Elementary
School is being moved to a new campus next to the current campus and the price
tag is $18,421,279.
Austin Elementary
School in Dunwoody was built and opened in 1975. The building is 43 years old.
It holds about 600 students and has been a “neighborhood” school with students
from the surrounding subdivisions. The
building has been well maintained and the only reason it is being torn down and
replaced for $18.5 million next to its original location is that it does not
hold 900 students.
The subdivisions in
Dunwoody have gone through one cycle with GenX students in the 1980s and
Millennials in the 1990s and now has a third generation enrolled. With each
generation, the school population has receded from 600 to 400 as the
generations pass to Middle School and then to High School.
Austin Elementary has
served the local subdivisions surrounding it and these subdivisions were
established in the 1970s. The distance from home in many cases is about 12
blocks. This is sufficient to allow
students to walk, bike or be driven to school. A 50% expansion of the student
population will extend out another 12 blocks and could result in adding school
bus routes.
In 1988, the “Middle
School” was born and that cut the population of Austin down by sending grades 6
through 8 to middle school located 2 miles away. This was another dumb move
designed to destroy the “neighborhood school” concept.
Bonds are another
problem. School Systems fund build
schools by selling Bonds. A 30 year Bond
at 5% interest costs double. So instead of the $20 million stated cost, there
is another $20 million in interest payments over 30 years.
I received a first
rate 1-8 elementary education at Immaculate Conception Catholic School in
Maplewood Mo. a St. Louis county suburb and graduated in 1957. The school was built in 1906 and was operational
until 1971 when it closed because of declining enrollment. It was well built
and has been well maintained and updated and was 65 years old when it closed.
My mom, 3 aunts and 8 uncles attended this school
I went on to receive a
first rate high school education at Christian Brother College Military High
School and graduated in 1961. The school
was established in 1850. It moved and expanded to Clayton Mo.in 1922. My Dad
and all of my uncles attended CBC. In 2003 the building and campus were 81 years
old and was sold to Washington University and is still in good use. In 2003,
CBC moved to a new expanded campus in west county at the intersection if I-64
and I-270.
I went on to receive a
first rate college education at St. Louis University and graduated in 1965.
This was also the “family school” for all my uncles. The school was established in 1818. I
attended classes in 80 year old classrooms. Iconic DuBourg Hall was built in
1888. It was 77 years old when I graduated. It was updated and well maintained.
It is now 130 years old.
Don’t tell me that
kids can’t get a good education in 100 year old school buildings. It’s cheaper
to maintain, expand and upgrade these buildings than it is to tear them down
and rebuild.
.
Norb Leahy, Dunwoody
GA Tea Party Leader
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