GPB News Archive

GPB's News site has MOVED!

Check out our completely redesigned webpage at

http://www.gpb.org/news

for the latest in local and statewide Georgia news!

Search This Blog

Blog Archive:

Showing posts with label Richmond County Georgia. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Richmond County Georgia. Show all posts

Thursday, June 4, 2009

School Board in Augusta Set to Furlough Employees and Cut Teacher Pay

The Richmond County school board has passed a $225 million budget for the upcoming fiscal year, making up for a projected $24.5 million shortfall with employee furloughs, cuts in teachers' pay and reductions in teaching staff.

Many of the system's employees will face a furlough of four days -- and therefore cuts in pay. Teachers, who by state law cannot be furloughed, will still take a pay cut in local salary supplements they receive from the school board.

Dr. Dana Bedden, Richmond County schools superintendent:


"Please accept my apologies for any difficulties and hardships the furlough may create. While the furloughs were not something I would preferred, I really believed they were better than layoffs."

Bedden noted that about 90 percent of the school system's budget is personnel costs.

Despite the furloughs and pay cuts, many teachers and employees will still receive pay raises mandated by the state. The raises, known as step increases, will cover a portion of their incomes that they would otherwise lose with the furloughs.

The board is also eliminating several teaching positions through attrition and the non-renewal of some teacher contracts.

The budget comes as school systems across the state grapple with major funding issues due to the troubled economy and significant losses in revenue.

For more information about the budget, click here.

Tuesday, November 18, 2008

Augusta schools may face system-wide rezoning

Augusta's Richmond County school system is considering a massive system-wide rezoning as student enrollment drops there.

Augusta has about 1000 less students than it did this time four years ago, and that's costing money.

The rezoning is part of the school board's efforts to save money by streamlining or consolidating schools.

The superintendent, Dr. Dana Bedden, is recommending the rezoning. He's also anticipating tensions from the community that might result.

"In the end, we hope people will see and feel that it wasn't a rush decision, and no one's being picked on because there was an opinion based on race or socioeconomic status or the haves and the have nots," says Bedden. "It's going to be based on what's good for the system."

School officials are unclear how much rezoning would cost initially, or how much cost savings...the ultimate goal...will be.

The rezoning is still just a proposal. The process will involve public hearings, and it must comply with a federal court desegregation order.

Thursday, December 6, 2007

Bomb threats at schools

Even top school administrators can't escape bomb threats.

Dr. Dana Bedden experienced one on his first day of school in Richmond County.

It happened on August 13.

Bedden, who had taken the reins of the school system in Augusta less than two weeks earlier, had just arrived at Glenn Hills Middle School for a visit when it happened.

"I'm pulling up to one of our middle schools and they were just going through a bomb threat, evacuations, as soon as I pulled into the parking lot." He said he hoped "that this is not an indication of what the year's going to look like, that we're not going to have a repeat of last year."

The Richmond County school system reported numerous bomb threats last year. Officials say 70 of those threats occurred at only two schools.

A bomb threat also happened at a high school in Jefferson, Georgia, in October, just as Kathy Cox, the state schools superintendent, was paying a visit there.

State schools take on bomb threats

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.

Wednesday, December 5, 2007

Augusta school officials oppose tax reform plan

School officials in Augusta are going on record against a controversial tax reform plan.

The Richmond County school board has voted to formally oppose the tax plan for education proposed by Georgia House Speaker Glenn Richardson (R-Hiram).

They will take their opposition before legislators at a breakfast on Thursday.

The plan would eliminate a portion of property taxes, replacing education dollars with expanded sales taxes.

But school officials in Augusta fear they would lose control of local education funds.

"Now, we're working under a system where the local authorities have the ability to cut taxes or raise taxes to support a system that the public will support," said Jack Padgett, a Richmond County school board member. "I'm just not sure that anytime you send money away that you would get it all back."

Richardson eventually wants to eliminate all property taxes.

"Property taxes are rising faster than people's ability to pay them, and it is time that local governments stop balancing their checkbooks on the backs of homeowners," said Clelia Davis, a spokeswoman for Richardson. "All we are asking is for the citizens of Georgia to have the right to vote and decide whether they want to eliminate property taxes and change the system. That is the ultimate form of local control."

The Georgia School Boards Association, meanwhile, says only a few school systems so far have asked them for assistance in drafting resolutions opposing the plan. Richardson has dubbed the plan GREAT, which stands for Georgians for the Repeal of Every Ad Valorem Tax.

Wednesday, November 14, 2007

Gangs identified

Richmond County sheriff Ronnie Strength identified these gangs as the ones involved in criminal activity that led to a major drug and firearms bust on Wednesday. Officials say they're neighborhood-based gangs located in downtown Augusta and in neighborhoods in the southern part of Augusta:

*Georgia Deadly Boys Gang, A.K.A. 23rd
*Only with True Thugs, A.K.A. O-Dub
*Glen Hills Boys Gang
*Uptown Boys/Farrington Gangster Thugs
*Meadowbrook Clique

Gang bust in Richmond County

Authorities in eastern Georgia are in the middle of a sting targeting people they say are involved in gang activity. They're rounding up nearly 100 people on drugs and weapons charges.

Officials with the U.S. Alcohol, Tobacco and Firearms say it's the second largest bust of its kind in U.S. history.

Richmond County sheriff's deputies and federal agents say the defendants are mostly gang members.

The undercover operation, called Augusta Ink, took place over 16 months at a tattoo parlor set up by police in the Richmond County town of Hephzibah. Dubbed the Colur Tyme tattoo parlor, police say they set it up in area where there was gang activity and where gang members lived.

"Violence, gun trafficking and drug dealing were the main ingredients of these gangs and their criminal lifestyle. They preyed on those with addictions and took advantage of the weak and defenseless for their own selfish gain," said Vanessa McLemore, special agent in charge of the ATF's Atlanta bureau.

In all, authorities confiscated about 400 weapons, 54 pounds of marijuana and nearly 1200 grams of cocaine.

Wednesday, October 31, 2007

Three in Richmond County diagnosed with staph

Three people in the Richmond County school system have been diagnosed with staph infection, according to school officials in Augusta. Dana Bedden, the school superintendent, says in a letter to parents today that the Methicillin-Resistant Staphylococcous Aureus (MRSA) was confirmed in an individual at Glenn Hills Middle School, another at Blythe Elementary School, and a third at the Richmond County Board of Education administration building. The letter did not specify if the individuals were students, teachers or school system staff members. The letter also said that "all students and staff who have confirmed cases of staph infection are expected to remain home until they are able to provide a physician's notice indicating they may return to school and/or work." Custodial staff, meanwhile, are cleaning areas where the infected people might have been. Staph infections can cause serious illness and even death among people with compromised immune systems or who don't get treatment. Serious staph infections are often found in hospitals and other healthcare facilities. Community-based MRSA, the infection reported in Richmond schools, often presents as a simple skin infection. This type of infection is resistant to common antibiotics such as penicillin, but is treatable with other medications. Health officials say community based MRSA is on the rise. Officials in the Columbia County school system say 12 students in nine schools there have been diagnosed with MRSA during the last two weeks. For more information, go to www.rcboe.org or www.cdc.gov.

GPB News Team: