The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Fulton schools says decision to pull rally permit was safety issue

March For Our Lives vents over ban from school property.

- By Arlinda Smith Broady abroady@ajc.com

Fulton County School System’s decision to rescind the permit for a rally at Centennial High School aimed at ending school gun violence has stirred up social media.

Those supporting the March For Our Lives movement and the student organizers behind the Road to Change summer tour have rebuked the administra­tion for changing its mind about allowing the event Monday on school property.

The movement was launched by students from Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School in Parkland, Fla., after a gunman killed 17 people at that school in February. Parkland students are part of the Road to Change tour, and some of them spoke at Monday’s rally, which drew about 1,000 people.

Social media posts about Fulton’s move included:

“Shame on you!! The only thinks (sic) you’re teaching the next generation is how to shut them down when you don’t agree with the message. That’s not what I remember about civics .... do the right thing, let them meet. You may learn something!”

“Any idea why they changed their mind? Permit given, per-

mit taken away. Sad”

In an exclusive interview with The Atlanta Journal-Constituti­on, Clifford Jones, Fulton County Schools chief academic officer, said the district exercised an abundance of caution when it appeared the organizers hadn’t properly addressed several aspects of the applicatio­n process.

A Twitter post from the school district Friday listed reasons the permit was not given. Those included the lack of advance payment as its facility-rental policy requires; lack of an acceptable insurance certificat­e, and lack of documentat­ion that adequate security arrangemen­ts were made. Fulton also said, “District policy requires that only non-profits and for-profit businesses, not individual­s, can apply to rent facilities.”

“We were already working on a compressed timeline,” said Jones. “The average lease takes about 21 days to finalize. When they didn’t get all the outstandin­g issues resolved by the 4:30 p.m Friday deadline, we had to deny the permit.”

“Fulton County has a tradition of empowering students to have a voice in issues of the day,” said Jones. Although he just came into his role on July 1, he pointed out that the district coordinate­d with students event for the April 20 walkout organized across the country in remembranc­e of the victims of the Columbine, Colo. mass school shooting 19 years ago.

Organizers of Monday’s rally have a different take on events.

Nurah Abdulhaqq, a student at Chapel Hill High School,said, “We received email confirmati­on on July 24 that we could hold the town hall at Centennial. And then around 2:30 on Friday we were told that they needed extra informatio­n.”

The students scrambled to meet the 4:30 p.m. deadline. At 5 they received word that the permit had been pulled.

The sponsoring organizati­on, Georgia Alliance for Social Justice stepped in on Saturday trying to reach an agreement to use the school. “The discussion­s were amicable,” said Jones. “But we decided to stick with our decision.”

Abdulhaqq said a similar incident happened in Salt Lake City, where a movie theater pulled out a few days before the town hall. But the organizers found an alternativ­e at the last minute.

When asked if they’ve learned anything from these experience­s, she quickly said, “Make sure you have a backup plan.”

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