The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Voters will decide on bonds to pay for $350M in projects.

- By Leon Stafford leon.stafford@ajc.com

When Anthony Smith p itched a $350 million SPLOST for Clayton County Schools during a town hall meeting this month, he kept coming back to one phrase over and over.

“Right here in Clayton County, y’all,” the district’s interim superinten­dent said in hopes of drumming up excitement about the south metro Atlanta school system’s plans.

He used the phrase when he boasted about the new $86 million Morrow High School and its aviation program, the $95 million con- vocation center the district plans to build to replace the Sears building at Southlake Mall and the nearly 50 Tesla charging stations coming to school property.

“Within that school,” he said of the new Morrow buildi n g, “is one of the most unique aviation programs that you will find in this country. Those students have the privilege of having 17 flight simulators to train for their pilot’s license moving forward.

“Right here in Clayton County.”

The repeated use of the phrase was part showmanshi­p and part effort to create civic pride. But it also was an acknowledg­ment that Clayton, which has about 52,000 students, desperatel­y needs to catch up to its metro Atlanta peers in the constructi­on of new buildings and in programs that prepare students for future jobs.

Throwback buildings

The south metro district has some of the oldest school buildings in the metro area, with Smith saying the aver- age age of Clayton’s facilities is about 50 years old. A handful of elementary school edifices date back to when the Edsel was popular and Elvis Presley ruled the charts.

Clayton residents will vote Tuesday on the SPLOST as part of a special election that will also choose a new sheriff and the county’s District 75 state House representa­tive. If approved, the county’s 1-cent special purpose local option sales tax for education would be col- lected for five years.

Unlike past referendum­s, the school system is asking residents to approve the issuing of $435 million in district bonds to pay for the $350 million in projects. Ronick Joseph, the district’s chief capital improvemen­t officer, said Clayton historical­ly has been a “pay as you go” district and that seeking bonds would allow the school system to more quickly get funding.

Joseph, who worked on the plan with Smith for the past two years under then-Superinten­dent Morcease Beasley, admitted that having both numbers in the language of the SPLOST can be confusing.

“I do feel that the lan- guage is a little ‘legalese,’” he said. “But our attorneys say every one of those words are needed.”

Attania Jean-Funny, a Clay- ton County mother of two and a former teacher with the school district, said she thinks the school system’s new approach to secure funding is innovative and would let Clayton address its issues more quickly.

“If we want our community to progress, it really starts with our school system,” she said.

But community activist Orlando Gooden is not as convinced about the SPLOST. He said the district’s leader- ship has been lacking for so long that he doubts giving them more money would improve the overall quality of education in the county.

Unfinished business

Like many districts, Clayton is seeking the new fund- ing while the most recent SPLOST, which will expire on Dec. 31, 2024, is still in effect. The district is fin- ishing up projects from that $280 million funding, including demolition and constructi­on of Forest Park Middle School. Stu- dents from the school have been moved to Morrow High School. Smith said the district has about $30 million in its account balance from past SPLOSTs.

One focus for the upcoming SPLOST will be the creation of early learning cen- ters to encourage more pre-K education. Five elementary schools — Lee Street, Lake City, Edmonds, Hendrix Drive and Kemp Primary — will be renovated and mod- ernized to accommodat­e early learning centers while the system will spend $25 million on a new Riverdale Early Learning Center.

Clayton w ill replace five elementary and middle schools — Mundy’s Mill Middle and Fountain, Huie, Morrow and Suder elementari­es — at about $35 million a pop and build a new North Clayton High School for about $70 mil- lion. Millions more will be spent to modernize 16 ele- mentary buildings, three middle schools and Mount Zion High School. Work at Lovejoy High School, costing about $70 million, will include modernizat­ion as well as a new addition.

The district also plans to build four new STEM schools to complement Michelle Obama STEM elementary, the only school of its kind in Clayton.

Among the priorities also will be the purchase of more than 300 buses at a price tag of about $29 million, Smith said.

“We’ve got a fleet that is so old that 90% of our fleet is beyond their useful life,” he said.

Preserving the past

About $2 million will be set aside to renovate an abandoned Rosenwald School location in Jonesboro. Rosenwald Schools were constructe­d as segregated education facilities beginning in the early teens of the 20th century for Black children.

“This is very important to the community overall, particular­ly to our older community,” Smith said.

Smith said to change the narrative that Clayton is a lagging district, it has to invest in itself.

“This is how you pay for capital improvemen­ts in a school system,” he said during the town hall. “The federal government doesn’t come in and build all this stuff for you. The state has a minimum role. It’s the local taxpayers, the ones who really provide for the bulk of the funding for this stuff.”

 ?? JENNI GIRTMAN FOR THE AJC ?? Interim Superinten­dent Anthony Smith hopes a $350 million SPLOST will be approved to help reinvigora­te Clayton County Schools. Voters will decide Tuesday. “This is how you pay for capital improvemen­ts in a school system,” Smith said. “... It’s the local taxpayers ... who really provide for the bulk of the funding.”
JENNI GIRTMAN FOR THE AJC Interim Superinten­dent Anthony Smith hopes a $350 million SPLOST will be approved to help reinvigora­te Clayton County Schools. Voters will decide Tuesday. “This is how you pay for capital improvemen­ts in a school system,” Smith said. “... It’s the local taxpayers ... who really provide for the bulk of the funding.”

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