The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Voting restrictio­ns not supported by this Republican

- KAREN JO BARNES, WARNER ROBINS

I am one of the white, educated, suburban women that Republican­s are hoping to win over.

But House Bill 531 and measures to end automatic voter registrati­on and no-excuse absentee voting will lose me as a frequent Republican voter.

The election-system changes being considered by senators are repressive, regressive, based on Trump’s lies, and a violation of Section 2 of the Federal Voting Rights Act. They are unfair to voters of color as well as to voters who face challenges such as no car for driving to polls. Talk about rigged elections.

These backward machinatio­ns do not restore my confidence in Georgia’s election system. Instead, they shake it.

If the Senate does make restrictiv­e changes that it hopes will give Republican­s a lock on elections, they might be surprised when Democrats win despite the changes.

Maybe then the General Assembly will realize their problem is not the election system, but the destructiv­e Trump-led direction in which Republican­s are heading.

Superinten­dent Lisa Herring continued her defense of Atlanta Public Schools’ vaccinatio­n plan Wednesday after Gov. Brian Kemp

the district for taking more than two weeks to start giving shots to teachers.

The state announced in late February Georgia’s teachers would be eligible for the vaccine beginning Monday.

APS, working with the Fulton County Board of Health, plans to provide the first doses to up to 8,000 employees during events on March 24, 26 and 27.

That schedule drew Kemp’s ire. On Monday, he called the delay “a disservice to their teachers”

accused APS leaders of playing “pandemic

Herring rejected that notion during a Wednesday forum

Atlanta superinten­dents hosted by The Atlanta Journal-constituti­on.

“To be clear, we have not done any disservice to our teachers. If anything, we have planned as strategica­lly as we possibly could to ensure that our teachers would be vaccinated,” Herring said. “If we had those vaccines available at any time earlier, we would also have been prepared to deploy our ability to vaccinate our teachers.”

Atlanta school board Chairman Jason Esteves put it more directly in a tweet this week: “We’d love to have an event this weekend, we just need the governor to send us supply.”

Fulton County Board of Health spokeswoma­n Sheena R. Haynes said preparatio­ns for teacher vac

cinations began six weeks ago in anticipati­on of the state expanding eligibilit­y to include educators.

She said March 24 “was selected as a potential date that this group would be eligible to receive the vaccine.” At the time, the state had yet to announce the date for the start of teacher vaccinatio­ns.

“However, once the official announceme­nt was made that teachers could be vaccinated beginning March 8, Atlanta Public Schools decided to move forward with hosting the (March 24) event because a lot of planning had already taken place. As their partner, we supported their decision,” Haynes said, in an email to The AJC.

The county health board also is working with Fulton County Schools, which will hold its first

staff vaccine event March 22.

Other school systems began vaccinatin­g teachers this week, though their plans vary.

Kemp first took aim at APS on Monday after touring a Gwinnett County vaccinatio­n site.

In early February, the Atlanta school board approved a resolution urging the stateto prioritize vaccines for teachers. So when APS announced it wouldn’t begin vaccinatio­ns as soon as teachers were eligible, Kemp pounced.

“Atlanta Public Schools board sent me a letter demanding that teachers needed to be vaccinated when they knew dang well I couldn’t do that. We didn’t have the supply to do that,” he said Monday. “It was pandemic

politics at its best, and now they’re going to wait two or three weeks. I believe that they’re doing a disservice to their teachers.”

The governor made similar remarks during a Wednesday news conference, but this time he didn’t specifical­ly call out APS.

“Even though we gave some school systems a 10-day heads-up we have some of them that have elected to wait to get their teachers vaccinated,” he said.

Herring said APS employees who want to get vaccinated before the district’s mass events can make their own appointmen­ts to do so. Haynes said the county health board “provided resources to assist those wishing to be vaccinated earlier.”

Kemp’s remarks are “unfortunat­e,” Herring said. APS has been planning for “many, many months.”

“Atlanta Public Schools is proud of the work that we’ve done for our faculty and staff and teachers and never has our focus been tied to disservice,” she said. “We appreciate the comment, but we’re very clear around what our work and focus has been.”

 ?? STEVE SCHAEFER FOR THE AJC ?? Atlanta Public Schools Superinten­dent Lisa Herring said: “To be clear, we have not done any disservice to our teachers. If anything, we have planned as strategica­lly as we possibly could to ensure that our teachers would be vaccinated.”
STEVE SCHAEFER FOR THE AJC Atlanta Public Schools Superinten­dent Lisa Herring said: “To be clear, we have not done any disservice to our teachers. If anything, we have planned as strategica­lly as we possibly could to ensure that our teachers would be vaccinated.”

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