School Choice Heats up in Georgia While Lawmaker Calls for Investigation Into BLM-Inspired County BOE Chair

AP Photo/Marta Lavandier, File

It’s school choice week, and news out of Georgia is good for proponents of giving parents options as to where their children are educated.

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According to the AP, that measure — which never came to the floor for a vote the first time it passed the Georgia House last year — was passed at the same time a broader version of the bill passed a subcommittee.

The House Education Committee on Tuesday passed a revised version of House Bill 60, which passed the same panel last year, sending it back to the House for more debate. Meanwhile, a subcommittee passed House Bill 999, a broader version of the same bill that would provide $6,000 a year to any child who attended public school for as few as six weeks. The full committee must still vote on that measure.

It’s unclear whether a House majority would favor either proposal, especially after House Bill 60 never came to a floor vote last year. A crucial fraction of rural Republicans resist many school choice proposals, along with all but a few Democrats.

Both new proposals can subsidize homeschooling by paying for tutoring or online classes.

“At the end of the day, I trust the parents to make the best decision for their child,” [Ga. GOP Rep. Wes] Cantrell [the bill’s sponsor] said.

Democrats and school groups oppose the bills, saying they would divert public funds to private schools.

Holly Terei, a parent activist from Gwinnett County, said she benefited as a child from a voucher program in Ohio that was the “jump start” her family needed to afford private school tuition. She said the Gwinnett County schools have failed her children during the pandemic.

“Our family is not in a position to move to a different county,” Terei said. “My family cannot afford private tuition. My family cannot afford to become a single income household so one parent can adequately homeschool. And so we are stuck.”.

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It’s interesting the AP sought out a Gwinnett County parent for quotes, because that county — directly to the north and east of Atlanta — has been in the news lately for some strange goings on related to education. Most recently, as covered by The Federalist, Heritage Action revealed that the county was trying to hide that it was teaching critical race theory (born out of Marxism’s critical theory) at the same time one Georgia lawmaker is seeking to ban CRT in the state.

From The Federalist:

Gwinnett County Public School’s apparent attempt to hide their left-wing agenda from public view comes after State Rep. Brad Thomas introduced a bill that would ban critical race theory in public schools.

[Heritage Action’s Executive Director Jessica ] Anderson explained her support for the bill, saying “This is exactly why State Rep. Brad Thomas’ bill is needed: HB 888 would require curriculum transparency, a commonsense tool that gives parents the ability to oversee their children’s education, and prevent state-sanctioned discrimination. The tenets of critical race theory, which divide students and Georgians on the basis of race, have no place in the classrooms of Georgia’s public schools.”

Tarece Johnson, the chairwoman of the Gwinnett County Public Schools Board of Education, has publicly endorsed CRT and openly displayed her hatred of white children. In one Facebook post, Johnson remarked that “there’s a killer cop sitting in every school where White children learn.”

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Gwinnett County — one of the last stops for Vice President Kamala Harris on the campaign trail before the 2020 election — has been elevated to national discourse after Johnson’s social media posts came to light in which she not only denigrated white children and called white people “socialized racists,” but was also seen in a bizarre video in which she hoists the BLM flag (an organization with its own ties to Marxist philosophy) and dances in the woods.

This led a Georgia Republican Senator to call for an investigation into Johnson.

In a letter sent to the Georgia Board of Education this week, Republican Sen. Burt Jones requested a full investigation into Johnson’s ‘implemented policies, and administrative actions – and whether they violate any of the code of conduct policies or other statutes.’

In Jones’ letter this week, he states that Johnson’s ‘actions severely undermine that mission and further divide our students and schools at a time when we need to united and come together.’

Jones, who is running for lieutenant governor this year, also highlighted Johnson’s comments about the district’s indication that one of its classes utilized critical race theory (CRT) as a reason for his request for the investigation.

Johnson’s book, ‘The Global Purpose Approach: A Multicultural Resource,’ reportedly describes CRT as part of multicultural learning, Fox News reported.

The syllabus, obtained by Heritage Action, a conservative think tank, reads: ‘Students will bridge the skills from AP Language to AP Research, analyzing the value of using different lenses in social criticism (Critical Race Theory, Feminist, Marxist, Psychoanalytic) to aid their analysis across issues, and the class will discuss how these perspectives apply to the different methods used by research fields.’

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Anderson told The Federalist that when the Gwinnett County school district tried to hide the CRT syllabus, it was a “clear admission of guilt.”

“Heritage Action is now submitting an open records request for all public documents and emails relating to why the syllabus was removed from the website and all documents containing the phrase ‘Critical Race Theory,’” Anderson told the news outlet.

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