The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

President removed amid investigat­ion

- — ERIC STIRGUS

Technical College System of Georgia officials are investigat­ing the finances of Georgia Piedmont Technical College after federal and state officials found problems serious enough that the system is removing its president.

Jabari Simama’s last day as the college’s president will be May 11, system spokesman Mark D’Alessio told The Atlanta Journal-Constituti­on. Four other administra­tors have been put on paid administra­tive leave, D’Alessio said.

Ivan H. Allen, the president of Central Georgia Technical College, is leading a team that is conducting an assessment of the situation at Georgia Piedmont Tech, which has campuses in DeKalb, Morgan, Newton and Rockdale counties and about 3,200 students.

“We’re trying to understand how far this goes,” D’Alessio said.

The U.S. Department of Education put the college on heightened cash monitoring status in March, D’Alessio said, a designatio­n that requires additional oversight of a college’s finances. Additional state audits revealed other unspecifie­d issues with the college, the spokesman said.

The Technical College System of Georgia has not implemente­d a plan yet to determine how they will find a new president for the college.

Simama was hired in September 2012. His career has included stints as an Atlanta City Council member and chief of st a ff to former DeKalb County Chief Executive Officer Burrell Ellis.

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