Officials in Augusta say their schools are getting far too many bomb threats.
They're joining school boards across the state in an effort to punish the parents of students who make those threats.
Officials say 70 bomb threats came in to schools alone in Richmond County last year.
The public safety response to each threat typically costs the county about $4000 to $8000.
The Georgia School Boards Association says bomb threats are a problem across the state.
Now, they want the legislature to pass a law holding parents accountable for a student's terroristic threats, school violence and theft.
"When we're taking and diverting resources from safety personnel to respond to a false alarm, that means someone else is not getting service and we are passing on a burden of cost to taxpayers that shouldn't be there, because of something that was not a real issue to them," says Dana Bedden, the Richmond County school superintendent.
The threats also disrupt classes, since principals often evacuate the students.
Suspects are often students, according to officials with the Georgia Emergency Management Agency.
In Richmond County, officials say some of the suspects are middle schoolers.
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Thursday, December 6, 2007
State schools take on bomb threats
Posted by
Mary Ellen Cheatham
at
12/06/2007 04:06:00 PM
Labels: Augusta Georgia, bomb threats, Dana Bedden, georgia emergency management agency, Georgia School Boards Association, Richmond County Georgia, school violence, schools, terroristic threats