Wednesday, September 10, 2014

Community Meeting with Atlanta Councilman Alex Wan [Sept 17]

from MANA acting President Lynn Ganim

Special MANA meeting

Atlanta's District 6 Councilman Alex Wan will present information about the City of Atlanta and what would be involved if our neighborhood chose to be annexed into Atlanta, one of the several possibilities that have been suggested for our area.

He will speak on Wednesday, September 17, at 7:00 at North Decatur Presbyterian Church.

As has been said many times, even though many of us would like to be left as we are in unincorporated DeKalb County, others are discussing—even planning— changes to our future, and it’s critical that we inform ourselves so that we can make our own educated decisions. Please plan to attend this important informational meeting.
Lay of the land: Councilman Wan's District 6 is outlined by a solid blue line; it abuts unincorporated DeKalb to its right. A dotted blue line further clarifies Atlanta city limits beyond District 6.  MANA is outlined in yellow. 

HorseFest @ Little Creek Horse Farm [Sept 20]

via Facebook...
"Little Creek Horse Farm, (just minutes from our neighborhood!) will be hosting their annual fall festival, "HorseFest" Saturday, September 20th from 12-4PM. This is a fun family friendly event which hosts riding and horsemandship demonstrations, pony rides, kid's crafts, carnival games, vendors, and food. Admission is $5 with kids 5 and under getting in free. Some activities cost extra with all profits going to benefit the Little Creek Farm Conservancy (LCFC). The event will happen rain or shine! Little Creek Horse Farm is located at 2057 Lawrenceville Hwy with our access road being off of Orion Dr. To learn more about HorseFest or LCFC, visit: www.littlecreekfarmconservancy.org"
LCFC is located at 2057 Lawrenceville Highway, Decatur, GA

Monday, September 8, 2014

Blueprint to Redefine DeKalb

Found on the DecaturMetro blog site, as a comment to the 9/5 Free-For-All Friday post:

  1. Staci says:
    This Tuesday, come hear DeKalb County Commissioner Kathie Gannon discuss her Blueprint to Redefine DeKalb:
    Our DeKalb County reached a ‘tipping point’ in 2013: nearly everyone now agrees that fundamental reforms are due. Beyond that general agreement, reaching consensus proves difficult. Even listing a Top Ten of the issues, crises and challenges that brought us to this tipping point invariably raises disagreement on one point or another from one quarter or another. We all seem to be going our separate ways.
    To move forward we should consider, “what does reform look like?” Continue reading the Blueprint to Redefine DeKalb @http://www.kathiegannon.com/tl_files/documents/Blueprint%20to%20Redefine%20DeKalb.pdf
    Invite your neighbors, friends, neighborhood association and homeowner’s group to join you at this important and informative session!
    Tuesday, September 9 @ 7:00 p.m.
    North Decatur Presbyterian Church
    611 Medlock Road, Decatur 30033
    Sponsored by Good Growth DeKalb

Sunday, September 7, 2014

Update(ish) on Druid Hills Charter Cluster

The conversation continues regarding the Druid Hills Charter Cluster (DHCC) petition, although it appears to have become very one-sided in recent weeks. DHCC advocates have been pushing the district and school board over the last several months to put the revised petition onto the school board agenda for another vote. And information from the DeKalb County School District's (DCSD) perspective? Cue the crickets chirping.

Representatives from both DHCC and DCSD were invited to speak at the September meeting of the Emory LaVista Parent Council meeting. David Moore, legal counsel for DHCC, presented a lengthy history of the charter petition from origination (out of concern regarding disparities in learning achievement between the five feeder elementary schools) to today (a revised petition has been sitting at the county offices since May 1, 2014; any actions taken by DCSD are largely unknown). The representative from DCSD, Dr. Frazer, kept her presentation to a strict description of the charter application timelines as they are presented on the DCSD website. During the question and answer period, it was clear that Dr. Frazer was not going to or was not allowed to answer questions on anything other than timelines in a general sense. As one might imagine, this left the audience (and DHCC representatives) feeling rather frustrated and confused. You can read more about the ELPC board's response to this here.

This past week, the Druid Hills Charter Cluster published their account of interactions with the school district from the beginning of the process. It is, of course, one side of a two-sided story - but it is a disturbing read. Since DCSD and the board aren't talking, we don't know their perspective on the petition review and (non)approval.

The next school board work session and business meeting are scheduled for Monday, September 8, and based on the agendas that were posted Friday afternoon, there will be no vote or discussion on the DHCC petition. Cue the crickets again...

How long will this continue? Anyone's guess, it seems. However, even if approved, it is hard to imagine how such a ground-breaking charter cluster could ever be successful without these two parties entering into more constructive conversations.

Friday, September 5, 2014

Monday, September 1, 2014

"New voices" in cityhood include MANA

WABE's Lisa George interviews the presidents of the Druid Hills and Medlock Park civic associations (Justin Critz and Lynn Ganim, respectively) to highlight how our neighborhoods are actively engaging in the cityhood debate.
"Neither neighborhood group knows at this point which of the options is probable or even possible. For Medlock Park, annexation by Atlanta would put it at the tail end of other areas that would have to be annexed. That includes Medlock’s next-door neighborhood, Clairmont Heights, another group of DeKalb residents now listening closely to the cityhood discussion." Read the rest @ WABE
To view our posts on the issue, going back to November 2012, click here.