Fulton County Schedule at a glance:
● Fall break — Oct. 9
● Thanksgiving break — Nov. 25-27
● Winter break — Dec. 21 - Jan. 4, students start back on Tuesday, Jan. 5.
● Presidents Day weekend break — Feb. 12-15
● Spring break — April 5-9
● Last day — May 21
Bus transportation hotline: 770-969-6091
Meal prices:
● Breakfast — Elementary, 80 cents; middle/high, 95 cents; reduced, 30 cents.
● Lunch — Elementary, $1.35; middle/high, $1.60; reduced, 40 cents.
What’s new: Five new schools and a new start-up charter school open. An expected increase of almost 2,000 students puts Georgia’s fourth largest system at about 90,000. The system also launches the Fulton Institute of Technology, a technical high school. For the first time, schools evaluate teachers on a “value-added” performance system, which measures student progress throughout the year rather than only on standardized tests given once a year.
Labels: Alpharetta, Fulton County, fulton county board of education, fulton county school board, fulton county school system, fulton county schools
# posted by
Brian Vanderhoff @ 8:44 AM
Opponents of a planned high school in Milton are upset with the City Council because, they say, a resolution to the Fulton County School Board wasn't tough enough.
The City Council resolution on Monday called on the school board to consider the concerns of nearby residents who worry about the environmental impact of the school on nearby creeks and rivers. Residents have been especially vocal about the prospect of having a large septic tank to handle the school's waste and about the expected runoff from the school.
Some opponents made a presentation with an environmental engineer, and asked the City Council to intervene. The city has no authority over where schools are placed by the school board, which acts independently of municipalities.
The resolution fell short of condemning the selection of the 116-acre site. Instead, it asked the school board to consider working with the City of Milton to conduct additional tests, and to coordinate with regulatory agencies to ensure that the new high school is designed and built in a safe and environmentally sound way.
Lisa Cauley, chairwoman of a group called Protect Milton, felt the City Council wimped out.
"We feel the City Council should have insisted the school board find an alternative site, since our reports and studies conclude Chicken Creek cannot handle any additional bacterial load," Cauley said Friday.
"We are confused, disappointed, frustrated about their stance," she said. "We were expecting something teethier. For some reason, they watered it down."
Councilwoman Tina D'Aversa also had hoped for the resolution would be worded stronger, but she said the council concluded the city lacked the authority to make demands on a co-equal government. And she said there was some concern that a strident resolution might alienate the school board.
"There was concern that a stronger request would cause greater pushback from them," D'Aversa said. "We think that if they will review the environmental studies, they will reach the same conclusion on their own."
Labels: city of milton, fulton county school board, New High School, planned high school, protect milton
# posted by
Brian Vanderhoff @ 9:01 AM