So what have they done now? They hired a new superintendent over the objections of the very committee that is responsible for determining if Clayton County will get their accreditation back. This new superintendent ordered the destruction of all of this years graduates diplomas because his signature wasn't on them. They didn't tell anyone. The first indication of this came when the first high school held their graduation and the supposed diplomas were handed out. Imagine their surprise when they opened up their folders only to find a blank piece of paper. Parents started asking questions and that is when it was revealed that the diplomas had been shredded and that it will now cost the county $50,000 to have them reprinted.
The reason? Clayton County Superintendent John Thompson ordered more than 3,000 high school diplomas shredded Thursday after seeing his name wasn't on them. On Friday, Thompson learned it will cost up to $50,000 to reprint the diplomas.Once again for those planning a move to the Atlanta area two areas to avoid is Dekalb County, which accounts for almost all of the crime in the metro Atlanta area and has more problems then Carter has liver pills and Clayton County which has the problems with it's school system.
It should come as no surprise either that these two counties are also hardest hit by the housing market. While they try to come up with all these other reasons the truth is having a high crime rate and unaccredited schools tends to hurt the housing market just a tad.
And yes, both of these counties are solidly Democrat. One of Dekalb's more famous residents or former residents is Cynthia McKinney.
No comments:
Post a Comment