The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

WHAT HAPPENED AT BUFORD SCHOOL BOARD MEETING

Several hundred pack chambers over lawyer’s tapes of racial epithets.

- By Arlinda Smith Broady abroady@ajc.com

Several hundred people packed the Buford City Schools meeting chambers Monday to hear what the board had to say after a lawsuit exposed taped conversati­ons, allegedly of the school superinten­dent, using a racial epithet repeatedly.

About a dozen of those attend- ing wore yellow T shirts with #IStandWith­Mary, referencin­g Mary Ingram, the former African-American employee whose lawsuit included a copy of the recordings. Her attorney later identified Phillip Beard, the chairman of the school board and the chairman of the city commission, as a second person whose voice can be heard on the tapes.

Beard, asked by parent Erica Gwyn if the second voice was his, stammered through an answer, saying he didn’t know. He contended the tape was doctored in some fashion.

“I don’t know if that was me,” he said. “It wasn’t revealed initially that I was on the recording. If I’m guilty, I’m guilty, and it will come out.”

A n oth e r speaker said he believed the voice was Beard’s.

“I see you two driving around in his truck together every day,” the man said. “You had to be comfortabl­e with each other to spend that amount of time together. He felt comfortabl­e enough to say that disgusting word in your presence five times.”

Superinten­dent Geye Hamby, 49, wrote a letter of resignatio­n late last week after the race discrimina­tion suit and recordings roiled the bucolic town of 14,000 on the outer reaches of Atlanta’s exurbs. It’s a former stop on the rail line to the Carolinas that grew up after the Civil War and prospered through the Depression, thanks to its saddle and leather works. In recent years, the little downtown of one and two-story brick building have filled back up with restaurant­s and boutiques and even some new constructi­on.

The first order of business in the overstuffe­d room, where the air temperatur­e rose to the level of the emotions on display, was to accept Hamby’s resignatio­n.

Ingram’s daughter, Christy Joiner, said the grandmothe­r is teaching Joiner’s children a history lesson about standing up for what is right.

The meeting continued pass the newspaper deadline. The Atlanta Journal-Constituti­on will continue to follow the story and bring you more details. Check back at AJC.com.

 ?? CURTIS COMPTON/CCOMPTON@AJC.COM ?? An overflow crowd reacts from the lobby outside the Buford City Schools meeting chambers at a board meeting Monday. Several hundred people attended the meeting. The temperatur­e was high in the crowded chambers.
CURTIS COMPTON/CCOMPTON@AJC.COM An overflow crowd reacts from the lobby outside the Buford City Schools meeting chambers at a board meeting Monday. Several hundred people attended the meeting. The temperatur­e was high in the crowded chambers.

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