dateline

Dade County, Georgia

Tuesday, March 11, 2014

Dade School Board Advertises For New Superintendent

Chairperson Carolyn Bradford (center) reads a job announcement for a new schools superintendent at Monday's work session of the Dade County Board of Education.  From right to left are board members Johnny Warren, Cindy Shaw, Bradford, Acting Superintendent Cherie Swader and board member David Powell.  Missing is member Jeff Forester, who is not seeking reelection in this year's midterms.
SWSS (Straight White School System) Seeks Enthusiastic Super For LTR.  Possibly.
By Robin Ford Wallace
Are you a certified Georgia academic leader, or in any case eligible for certification, a strong leader and able to work well with others?  If so, you may also be eligible to be the new schools superintendent the Dade County Board of Education is seeking – as long, that is, as you are also enthusiastic.
The Dade Board of Education officially launched its search for a new school system boss at an informal work session on Monday afternoon.  BOE Chairwoman Carolyn Bradford saved the announcement for last, waiting until acting Superintendent Cherie Swader – the former second-in-command appointed to fill the gap left by the early contract buyout of former Superintendent Shawn Tobin, effective last month – had taken board members through a laundry list of routine agenda items before reading a prepared release about the search.
“The Board has devoted extensive time to discussion of qualifications desired of the next Superintendent,” reads the statement.  “Qualifications and traits identified by the Board include enthusiasm, strong leadership, and the ability to work closely with the system’s current employees.”
“Extensive time” in this case boils down to the three weeks or so since, at a special called meeting on Feb. 20, the board gave Tobin the shove and a $44,500 check to buffer it; and the schedule Ms. Bradford provided in the release made it clear that the board intends to proceed just as briskly with replacing him.  Deadline for receiving applications is about a month from now, 4 p.m. on April 14, and after conducting interviews through May 10 the board hopes to name a new super in the week of May 12-19, installing him or her in his or her spacious new Tradition Lane office by July 1.
If it seems like a matter of marrying in haste, Dade County has not of late been in the habit of cultivating long-term relationships with its school superintendents.  The new hiree will be the fourth since the beginning of the century.  Tobin’s bare three years at the top, riddled with controversy almost from the beginning, were preceded by the less turbulent administration of Patty Priest, who left the job amid general approbation to seek a planned retirement; but her predecessor, Judy Bean, departed under darker auspices after a series of well-publicized wrestling matches with the board.
Superintendent Tobin drew attention to the school system through banning a National-Book-award-winning novel from the high school; defunding the already struggling Dade County Library; and, latterly, campaigning to amend a local tax break that allows seniors to exempt their houses of however high a value from school taxes.
The release issued by the school board says student enrollment systemwide in Dade is 2,237, with a teaching and support staff of 310.  There are four schools in the system.
The school board will post its advertisement for a new superintendent through the Georgia School Board Association, the Georgia School Superintendents Association, the Regional Education Service Agencies (RESA), and mailings to school systems.
To qualify, applicants must submit a cover letter, resume, references, completed job application obtained from the school system, and copy of Georgia leadership certificate or evidence of eligibility for same.  An application and job description are available at the school system’s website, dadecountyschools.org. 
The website also invites interested parents to participate in a “Dade County Superintendent Search Survey.”
The advertisement does not specify salary but a Georgia open records website lists the outgoing superintendent’s fiscal year 2013 salary as $106,904.33 with travel allowance of $1550.
At the work session were candidates Alan Painter, who is running for the Georgia House of Representatives, and Summer Kelley, who is vying for the District 2 school board seat to be vacated by Jeff Forester -- but who was at the meeting in her role as journalist, videotaping the meeting for the local television station. 
Other agenda items considered at the Monday school board session included proposed school calendars for the upcoming 2014-15 school year.  Acting Superintendent Swader presented the board with three, explaining that start and stop dates for the new year depend on how many instructional days financial reality will permit to be added back into the system’s foreshortened schedule.
Proposed schedules include instructional days of 171, 170 and 169, down from the 180 days of yore but improved over the budget-shaved roster of 168.  Ms. Swader said the system will add one, two or three days back in, depending on what news comes up from Atlanta after the Georgia legislative session concludes in coming weeks.         
Proposed starting dates for the school year are Aug. 20, 21 or 22, with end dates of May 27 through 29, depending on funding.  
Ms. Swader said funding may one day be available to restore schools to the full 180 days, which after years of calendar slashing may – in Shakespeare’s words, not Ms. Swader’s – make “summer’s fair have all too short a rent” indeed.  “That’s going to be pretty much a shock on everybody, so this is more a gradual movement on that,” she said. 
 Otherwise, Ms. Swader asked the board to consider spending for various capital projects, including a new roof for the high school, new equipment for the nutrition program and purchase of a new car for staff travel.
Staffers are currently saving the system mileage money by using for their required job travel two 2007-model automobiles the system bought for since-discontinued driver’s education classes, said Ms. Swader; but drivers of one of the vehicles, a Taurus, are experiencing mysterious noises and distressing dashboard lights.
Ms. Swader also said she hoped to have available for next week’s regular meeting of the board an Atlanta expert to advise board members about seeking funds to replace its ailing heating and air conditioning system.
That meeting is at 6 p.m. Monday in the school board office in front of the high school, off Highway 136 East.

robinfordwallace@tvn.net

Monday, March 10, 2014

More Than You Ever Wanted To Know About Local Option Sales Tax

Dade Commission Ties Up Loose Ends For SPLOST Question on May BallotBy Robin Ford Wallace

The Dade County Commission at its regular March 6 meeting finalized formalities to make renewal of its longstanding special purpose local option sales tax (SPLOST) a referendum item in the May primary elections. 
A lot rides on the referendum results:  The county depends on funds generated by this 1-cent to a dollar tax on purchases to buy everything from road equipment to fire trucks.
Dade has in fact already borrowed, through a 2013 bond issue shared with the independent Dade Industrial Authority Development Authority (IDA), against anticipated SPLOST collections to pay for emergency road repairs necessitated by last year’s heavy rains. 
But Dade voters have historically returned a consistent yes to the SPLOST, which must be reapproved very five years.  “I know I’ve got records going back to 1998,” said Townsend.
This year’s SPLOST project list is largely a continuation of the one adopted in 2009, which in turn had carryovers from the 2004 list.  “Everything, pretty much, on this one was on the other one,” said County Clerk Don Townsend.  “They run out and we just continually renew it.”
An exception is the new county courts facility, which is now a fait accompli and thus off the to-do lineup, he added.
But many other projects are ongoing, such as roads, which require constant upgrades and maintenance, and capital safety investment such as equipment and vehicles for the county’s 911 Emergency Center and volunteer fire departments, which must also be updated, repaired or replaced periodically.
The SPLOST language also gives Dade permission to spend for relocation of county offices in case of a “major disruption,” such as a tornado or flood, said Townsend, but he added that at present no county employee was in need of any such relocation as far as he knew.
Dade commissioners, like other county leaders statewide, tout local option tax as a “fair tax” paid by citizens as well as by travelers passing through and buying gasoline or other incidental purchases.
In Dade, sales tax is 7 cents on the dollar.  In addition to the 4-cent state sales tax imposed by Georgia and the 1-cent SPLOST, buyers pay another penny for LOST, or regular local option sales tax, and one more for ESPLOST, an educational special purpose local option sales tax that goes directly to the county school system.
ESPLOST is imposed and renewed separately every five years, in Dade’s case, most recently in 2012 – after it was allowed to elapse for three months because of the school system’s failure to get it on the ballot in time.
But LOST needs renewal only every 10 years.
SPLOST funds by Georgia law must be used for capital expenditures as opposed to general operating costs.  LOST money, by contrast, explained Townsend, is used in Dade entirely to offset real estate tax collection.
The county LOST portion, that is – “I’m not sure what the city does with theirs,” he added.
He elucidated that in Dade County, LOST funds are shared between Dade and the Trenton city government in a simple, population-determined 80/20 split.  In larger counties that contain more than one town, added Townsend, that sharing between county and municipality can get more complicated.
Georgia adopted the LOST initiative for counties in 1978 and SPLOST in 1985.
Other concerned parties to Dade’s SPLOST referendum, the Dade Water and Sewer Authority and IDA, had already signed off on this year’s version. 
And the Trenton City of Commission held a special called meeting, also on March 6, to approve an intergovernmental agreement with the county required for the SPLOST question. 

robinfordwallace@tvn.net

Citizen Asks For Explanation of School Board's Actions

Carol Varnell (center), pictured here at an earlier Dade County Commission meeting, asked the body Thursday for an explanation of the school board's recent doings.  The commissioners explained they weren't kept in the loop themselves.

Will School Board Explain Itself?  Probably Not, Says Powell
By Robin Ford Wallace


One Dade citizen attending Thursday’s March meeting of the Dade County Commission asked the commissioners to explain recent doings of the county school board.
Why, asked Carol Varnell, had the Dade County Board of Education chosen to pay Superintendent Shawn Tobin $44,500 to leave early rather than letting him serve out his notice?  “We have to pay extra money because of what the school board did.  I don’t understand,” said Ms. Varnell.
Also, she asked, what had happened with Tobin anyway?  Had he resigned?  Everything had seemed to be moving smoothly along, she said; then suddenly, it came out Tobin was leaving.  “Did something bad happen that they couldn’t get along?” she asked.   “To me, it was like a hush-hush thing,” she said.
The commissioners explained that the school board was a separate entity and didn’t have to give them a reason for its actions.   “I can’t really demand that they share it with us,” said Dade Executive Chairman Ted Rumley.
Ms. Varnell wasn’t having any of that.  Rumley was the head of the county, wasn’t he?  “How come you don’t know that when people in Dade County want to know it?” she asked.
Rumley and the other commissioners explained that what the board of education had done was buy out Tobin’s contract, and that part of the $45,543.98 it paid him was for salary already earned as well as accumulated vacation time.  “I think it ended up being around 20, 25 they paid him to go away,” said District 2 Commissioner Scottie Pittman.
“I believe we could have stomached to give him another nine weeks for that,” commented a man in the audience.
“That’s a lot of money coming out of Dade,” said Ms. Varnell.  “I think the people of Dade County have been done wrong by the school board and I’ll tell them that.”
Rumley couldn’t answer Ms. Varnell’s questions but speculated school board members themselves would oblige.  “Surely they’ll come out and have a briefing,” he said.
 But board of education at-large member David Powell says no, they probably won’t. 
“I doubt they’re going to come out and give their reasons,” said Powell, contacted by phone on Friday. 
Board Chairperson Carolyn Bradford had issued a written statement at the time of the buyout, he reminded, thanking Tobin for his service and saying the move would allow the board to appoint an interim superintendent and begin a search for a permanent replacement.  “That’s all the information that’s going to be given,” said Powell.
And Powell – the only one of the five-member board to vote against the buyout – says he’s as much in the dark as anybody as to why his fellow board members acted the way they did.   “I’ve asked the same question,’ he said.  “I can’t tell you why because they haven’t told me why.”    
Powell said he’d learned about the buyout pretty much “through the grapevine.”  “Why there was even a mention of a buyout, I don’t know,” he said.
He said that in earlier executive sessions – executive sessions are closed-door conferences the board uses to discuss personnel matters – it had become clear that Tobin was not going to be asked to stay on.  “Shawn was not getting his contract renewed,” he said.  “He knew he wasn’t getting a renewal.  It never went to a vote because it wasn’t going to get the numbers.”
And Powell, who continues to champion Tobin – “He’s not perfect but I believe he’s done a good job running the system” – says he didn’t understand that, either.  Powell said he’d solicited input from the community and the other board members about what Tobin had done to earn their disapproval.  “My phone never rang,” he said.
In any case, said Powell, Tobin had accepted that his Dade tenure was over and had been able to use credit for his years of military service to qualify for an early retirement.  But as to the early buyout, Powell said the idea for that appeared to have evolved from a chance remark the superintendent had made earlier after learning about a colleague in another county being offered a similar deal. 
“Shawn made a comment in passing about, ‘If you want to buy me out,’ ” said Powell.  “People took it upon themselves to run with that.”
Powell explained a contract buyout was a good thing for an employee, because he could take his lump sum and leave, perhaps accepting another position, as he understood Tobin to have done.
 The Planet emailed the other board of education members for comment on the buyout but by the time of this writing had not received a reply.
And indeed, the Dade Board of Education is not traditionally an overwhelmingly forthcoming body.  Ms. Varnell was able to ask her questions directly to the Dade County Commission, and receive face-to-face such answers as the commissioners were able to furnish.
But at public hearings at the Dade Board of Education, the board has invoked written guidelines specifying it will listen to the public but not answer.
Yet it is to the board of education that the lion’s share of the public’s local tax dollars go.  Chief Appraiser Paula Duvall of the Dade County Tax Assessor’s office confirmed Monday that of each Dade real estate tax dollar, the school board receives about 75 cents and the county commission 25.
The school board is to hold a work session this afternoon at 5 p.m. at which it is slated to take up the matter of finding a new superintendent.  Associate Superintendent Cherie Swader has been appointed interim head of the system.
robinfordwallace@tvn.net

Friday, March 7, 2014

Goff Resigns as County Commissioner, Announces Run For Georgia House

Dade District 3 Commissioner Robert Goff, shown here making a stand against littering in 2010, resigned his commission seat today in favor of a bid for the Georgia House. 

Goff Resigns Dade Commission, Runs For Georgia House
By Robin Ford Wallace
 

Qualifying for this year’s midterm elections ended today at noon, and the shocker of the day was one new name added at the last minute to the list of hopefuls for the District 1 slot in the Georgia House of Representatives:  Robert Goff.
Goff, a Republican, currently serves as the District 3 member of the Dade County Commission – or he did at last night’s commission meeting.  He resigned his post shortly before lunch as required by Georgia election rules in order to qualify for the state position.
Goff, who first won the county commission seat in 2008, was in the middle of his second term, having been reelected without opposition in 2012.  On the commission, he has served as Dade’s liaison to the Georgia Legislature, visiting Atlanta often and monitoring pending legislation on the county’s behalf.
But Goff says his inside look into the doings of the House is not what inspired him to throw his name into the hat. 
What did?  “I feel like a state representative should be more than just 40 hours in Atlanta,” Goff said by cellphone today as he and his wife, Ruth, returned from the capital.  “You should see them around.”
Goff said Dade’s voice in Atlanta should have a clue what’s being said in Dade, and thus should attend a county or Trenton city commission meeting at least occasionally.  “And maybe stop by the school superintendent’s every now and then,” he added.  “They need to know what’s going on.”
  And that, said Goff, who had considered running for the House as early as three years ago, is what pushed him over the edge.   “We haven’t had that with the current representative.”
That current representative, John Deffenbaugh, first elected in 2012, has also qualified to seek reelection to the House seat.  
Goff says he has plenty of time to serve in the House, having retired from UPS eight years ago – six of which have been spent largely in the commission office.  “I may make my wife a little madder,” he said.
Dade County Executive Chairman Ted Rumley says Goff will be missed on the commission.  “I hate to lose him,” he said.
But Rumley added that Goff’s departure might not be a lasting one – if he should lose the Republican primary on May 20, there is no reason he should not qualify to run in the special election for his county commission replacement that will have to be appended to the general election in November.
Rumley said that the commission will appoint a replacement within 15 days to fill the District 3 county slot for the remainder of the year.  The special election in November will then determine who will serve out the remaining two years of Goff’s term.
Goff concurred that his current Plan B was to run as his own successor in November should he be beaten at the polls in May for the House, but added that County Attorney Robin Rogers was still checking on the propriety of such a move.
Also running for the House seat are Republican Alan Painter, a Walker resident whom Deffenbaugh narrowly defeated in the 2012 primary; and Democrat Tom McMahan, who also ran for the seat in 2012 on the Democratic ticket.
Georgia House District 1 includes Dade and parts of neighboring Walker County. 
robinfordwallace@tvn.net    

Writer's Column
_____________________________________________________________________

Welcome to the Center of the Universe!

By Robin Ford Wallace

My college friend Vivian O’Dell and I reconnected recently via the miracle of Facebook.  We hadn’t seen each other since 1980 but she sent me a friend request, I responded, and by July 2012 we were sitting on my front porch catching up. 
Viv had dropped in for a visit since she was back in the States anyway for various events connected to her work at CERN, the nuclear research facility in Switzerland.  You may recall it was that month that CERN and associated facility Fermilab announced they had isolated the Higgs boson, the so-called “God particle,” which allows for the existence of the universe.
I’m not kidding.  I’m still not precisely (OK, not even vaguely!) sure what the hell the Higgs boson is, but my old pal Viv – Dr. O’Dell now – really was one of the physicists who tracked it down, and now she was sitting in the porch swing at my house on a dirt road in the Rising Fawn metro area, telling me all about it.
Vivian said she divided her working life between Fermilab, the American particle research laboratory near Chicago, and Geneva, where CERN had installed the Hadron Collider, the largest and most powerful particle accelerator ever built.  Viv and the other physicists had used the collider to isolate the God particle, but it hadn’t all been smooth sailing:  Protestors had filed a lawsuit in Hawaii to stop them before they and the Hadron destroyed the universe.
“They claimed we were going to make black holes that were going to suck up the world,” explained Vivian. 
Viv & crew were doing nothing of the kind, she sniffed; the protestors were crackpots, and the only reason the scientists took any notice is they worried the negative publicity might endanger their funding.  And in the end, the case had gone quietly away.  The judge threw it out because he had no jurisdiction over Geneva, much less the outer edges of infinity. 
Still, I was awed.  I’d never known anybody before who had even been accused of tearing holes in the fabric of reality.
And really, if you had known Vivian back in the day, you wouldn’t have thought she was the type, either.  We met at the University of Georgia in 1970-something, when we were teenaged hippies majoring in English.  She had long blond hair, I had long brown hair, and between us we knew every song Bob Dylan ever wrote.
During those years, Viv and I took one of those epic summer trans-America road trips young people used to make routinely as a rite of passage, the way the kids now upgrade their smart phones.  It involved waitress jobs in New Mexico, a lot of camping, and a beat-up VW van we named – of course we did! – Dylan.  Here is (some of) a song we wrote about Dylan the van, to the tune of “A Four-Leaf Clover.”
“His horn sounds at sunset
And sometimes at dawn;
His lights work to show us
The road that we’re on.”
We also wrote a long, mournful road song to the tune of “500 Miles” when we were reading Hemingway’s Islands in the Streams:
“All the hero’s sons are dead
And he’s had three chicks in bed.
It’s got fi-ive-hundred pages, all in all.”
Once, stuck in El Paso waiting for some mechanical work to be done on Dylan, we wandered through the parking lots – El Paso was mostly parking lots – looking for something to eat.  We saw what we thought was a signboard for a fast-food place and paused in front of it, reading the menu.
Back then, drive-through windows, though already rife in Texas, had not made their way to the Southeast, so when the “signboard” suddenly spoke up, asking to take our order, we were both astonished.  “What manner of being are you?” we asked it.  And:  “Do you come in peace?”
We were just a couple of goofy liberal arts types!  There was no absolutely no indication Viv was any more scientific than I was.  But after I graduated, apparently, she found her true calling, changed her major to physics and basically never left academia.  When she finished her undergraduate degree, she kept studying and eventually earned a Ph.D.  After that, she didn’t go into teaching, just kept pursuing her research, and she must have been pretty good at it because she ended up on one of the two Higgs boson teams in Geneva.
So!  That’s the story Vivian had to tell me after 30-odd years:  She’d figured out how the universe worked and stuff.  What I told her in return was:  “I, er, write for a small weekly newspaper in Dade County, Georgia.”
Well, what else could I do?  There was no point pretending to be dead; I’d already set out canapés.


Vivian (with motorcyle) and me (on porch swing) in Athens in 1976, and reunited on my porch here in summer 2012.  The old pics are from my sister Laura's treasure troves.

It was all fairly humbling, but when I told the story to one of my neighbors, he said, “Well, if the two of you walked into the local Ingle’s, who’s the one everybody would recognize?”
He probably said it to make me feel less like a subatomic particle my own self but it gave me some comfort.  Viv might have sussed out quantum physics while I was still puzzled by instant pudding, but I know where most of the black holes are in Dade County.  As the local reporter, I know more about it than I do about any other place, more than I imagine is strictly healthy sometimes; yet I’m always discovering something new.
Anyway, this is my little acre of the universe.  I like it here.  It’s my place and I maintain it’s about as good as any other.
I’ve noticed people tend to think where they live is somehow less important, even less real somehow, than other places.  Businesses in Chattanooga say, “Of course we’ll bring in someone from Atlanta for the work, so you know it’ll be professional”; whereas when I lived in Atlanta they would fill in the same blank with “New York” or “Los Angeles.”  When lots of times, someone local would clearly make a better job of it.  I see that happen in Dade all the time!
This geographical inferiority complex is probably to some extent due to simple humility:  People, modest about their own place in the universe, naturally think the important events of history must be happening elsewhere – that “where it’s at” is not where they’re at.
  But where people think it is, in fact, “at” is not at all clear.  Someplace bigger, maybe, somewhere far away, and especially –this is weird – someplace on television.
When I was a kid, I myself had the idea that what I saw on the flickering tube was more real, more correct, than what went on at my house.  The perfect families in their perfect clothes who always worked out their problems by the end of the half-hour episode were the normal ones, the ones doing reality right, while we clumsy Fords, with our smells, our noises and our squabbles, were freakish and disappointing. 
            In fact, just about everything on television is glaringly fake!  Not just the talking horses, secret witches and extraterrestrial uncles I watched then, now called “classic” TV, and not just the preternaturally wise parents and perfect children of the old family shows that made us all feel like slobbering inbreeds; but the skylines behind newscasters, the laughter after one-liners, the food in restaurant commercials – practically everything and everybody that goes before the television camera gets replaced, revamped or slimed up with goo to make them shine.  Who would think they could get lipstick on our good-ole-boy Southern pols?  But it happens.
Still, I’m always reading articles about the excitement generated when some soap opera actress from 20 years ago (“Who?”) agrees to come to Chattanooga to address a women’s group, or some local guy manages to propose to his girlfriend on a televised talk show (“Ack!”).  It’s the same attitude:  What we see in TVland counts, what happens in our neighborhood doesn’t. 
Even my brilliant physicist friend did this a little.  Vivian didn’t boast about unraveling the secrets of the universe, or say a word about her team being nominated for the Nobel Prize; but she did let fall that her CERN colleague, Dr. Richard Field, was the brother of the actress Sally Field. 
On NPR once there was a jokey sequence where the commentator explored the saying, “Well, it ain’t brain surgery,” by asking brain surgeons if they felt any smarter than the rest of us.  They said no, that what they said among themselves was: “Well, it ain’t rocket science.”  So the commentator asked a NASA scientist and he said no, rocket scientists didn’t feel all that special, they had kind of a complex about not being as bright as theoretical physicists.   
If that’s the scientific hierarchy, then there Viv is at the pointy tiptop of the food chain; and what impresses her is hanging out with the Flying Nun’s brother?  Go figure!
Anyway, my point here is that living in the middle of nowhere doesn’t mean we live in the middle of nowhere.  This is reality!  No place – not New York, not LA, not whatever the fake skyline behind the newscaster is supposed to represent – is realer or more important than here, where we live. 
This is it.  This is real.  This is where it happens.  This is where it counts.  This is – because we don’t mind ending sentences with prepositions in Dade County; in fact it’s practically mandatory – where it’s at.
You could say that about anywhere you live, I expect; but I also maintain in Dade it’s a bit more true.  Ever since I’ve been here myself I’ve noticed it has an odd black-holey way of sucking in people you wouldn’t expect.  I have a theory if I sit here long enough, anyone I want to see will eventually turn up.  If you need further proof, did I mention that the Higgs boson physicist, Vivian O’Dell, got sucked onto my porch in the Rising Fawn metro area?
All this has been in aid of explaining why anyone should read an online newspaper written from, and about, Dade County, Georgia.  I’ll tell you the answer, and I think it also in its humble way says something about the fabric of reality, though I’ll tell you for free I don’t know a Higgs from a handsaw when the wind is southerly:
This is the throbbing heart of the living universe.
robinfordwallace@tvn.net