Three of the five seats on the Fayette County Public Schools were up for general election on November 8, 2016. A primary election was held on May 24, 2016. District 1 incumbent Barry Marchman (R) defeated challenger Melissa Lohr (D) in the general election. In District 3, incumbent Marion Key lost the Republican primary to Scott Hollowell. Hollowell won without opposition in 2016. Brian Anderson defeated Susan Stopford in the District 5 Republican primary. Anderson won the District 5 general electeion against Democratic candidate Ching Ching Yap. Angela Kelly Stowman (D) withdrew from the District 3 race prior to the general election.[1]
In August 2016, Fayette County's school board joined other Georgia school districts in opposing a state constitutional amendment dealing with state oversight of failing schools. Learn more about the amendment and school board responses to the amendment here.
Elections
Voter and candidate information
The Fayette County Board of Education consists of five members elected by district to four-year terms. The candidate filing period for Georgia school board candidates lasted from March 7, 2016, to March 11, 2016. Prospective candidates for partisan office submitted declarations of candidacy with their county parties. The voter registration deadline for the primary election was April 26, 2016. County residents were able to register to vote in the general election through October 11, 2016.[2]
The following dates were key deadlines for Georgia's partisan school board elections in 2016:[3]
Deadline
|
Event
|
March 7, 2016 |
First day of candidate filing period
|
March 11, 2016 |
Candidate filing deadline
|
April 26, 2016 |
Voter registration deadline for primary election
|
May 24, 2016 |
Primary election
|
July 26, 2016 |
Primary runoff election (if necessary)
|
October 11, 2016 |
Voter registration deadline for general election
|
November 8, 2016 |
General election
|
Candidates and results
District 1
Results
Fayette County Board of Education, District 1 General Election, 4-Year Term, 2016 |
Party |
Candidate |
Vote % |
Votes |
|
Republican |
Barry Marchman Incumbent |
62.82% |
8,836 |
|
Democratic |
Melissa Lohr |
37.18% |
5,230 |
Total Votes |
14,066 |
Source: Georgia Secretary of State, "General Election November 8, 2016," accessed December 14, 2016 |
Candidates
District 3
Results
Fayette County Board of Education, District 3 Republican Primary Election, 4-Year Term, 2016 |
Candidate |
Vote % |
Votes |
Scott Hollowell |
51.13% |
1,692 |
Marion Key Incumbent |
48.87% |
1,617 |
Total Votes |
3,309 |
Source: Georgia Secretary of State, "General Primary and Nonpartisan General Election May 24, 2016," accessed December 14, 2016 |
Candidates
Withdrawn candidates
Defeated in the primary
District 5
Results
Fayette County Board of Education, District 5 General Election, 4-Year Term, 2016 |
Party |
Candidate |
Vote % |
Votes |
|
Republican |
Brian Anderson |
63.57% |
37,257 |
|
Democratic |
Ching Ching Yap |
36.43% |
21,350 |
Total Votes |
58,607 |
Source: Georgia Secretary of State, "General Election November 8, 2016," accessed December 14, 2016 |
Fayette County Board of Education, District 5 Republican Primary Election, 4-Year Term, 2016 |
Candidate |
Vote % |
Votes |
Brian Anderson |
59.10% |
6,636 |
Susan Stopford |
40.90% |
4,593 |
Total Votes |
11,229 |
Source: Georgia Secretary of State, "General Primary and Nonpartisan General Election May 24, 2016," accessed December 14, 2016 |
Candidates
Defeated in the primary
Additional elections on the ballot
- See also: Georgia elections, 2016
Georgia's general election ballot featured races for U.S. president, U.S. House and U.S. Senate. This ballot included races for the Georgia State Senate, Georgia House of Representatives, state courts, and county courts.
The May 24 school board election shared the ballot with Georgia's statewide primary. This primary included races for Georgia State Senate, Georgia House of Representatives, and local court seats. Primaries for U.S. House and U.S. Senate seats were on the ballot.
Endorsements
Do you know of an official or organization that endorsed a candidate in this race? Let Ballotpedia know by email at editor@ballotpedia.org.
Campaign finance
- See also: List of school board campaign finance deadlines in 2016
Georgia candidates are able to file as exempt from reporting if they do not exceed $2,500 in contributions or expenditures during an election.
Candidates received a total of $16,512.90 and spent a total of $12,219.22 as of November 2, 2016, according to the Fayette County Board of Elections.[4]
District 1
Candidate
|
Contributions
|
Expenditures
|
Cash on hand
|
Barry Marchman (incumbent)
|
Exempt
|
Exempt
|
Exempt
|
Melissa Lohr
|
$3,633.47
|
$1,179.16
|
$1,179.16
|
District 3
District 5
Past elections
Information about earlier elections can be found by clicking [show] at the right. | |
---|
2014
General: District 4
General: District 5
Primary runoff: District 4
Primary: District 4
Primary: District 5
2012
|
What was at stake?
Election trends
The Fayette County Board of Education surpassed the average number of candidates per seat for Georgia board elections covered by Ballotpedia in 2014. Fayette County's election featured four candidates per seat, while Georgia school board elections as a whole averaged 1.85 candidates per seat. The 2016 election featured 2.6 candidates per seat with no seats unopposed out of three seats up for election.
School board election trends
|
Year
|
Candidates per seat
|
Unopposed seats
|
Incumbent success rate
|
Seats won by newcomers
|
Fayette County Board of Education
|
2016 |
2.6 |
0.00% |
TBD |
TBD
|
2014 |
4.0 |
0.00% |
100.00% |
50.00%
|
Georgia
|
2014 |
1.85 |
46.56% |
86.54% |
31.3%
|
United States
|
2014 |
1.89 |
32.57% |
81.31% |
38.24%
|
School board opposition to Amendment 1
School boards throughout Georgia passed resolutions opposing a state constitutional amendment that would have changed how failing schools are governed in the state. Amendment 1, which was up for a yes/no vote on November 8, 2016, would have allowed the state to create an Opportunity School District (OSD) to govern schools given a rating of chronically failing. If approved, the OSD would have been run by a governor-appointed superintendent with the power to directly manage districts, share governance with school boards, or change schools into charter schools. Gov. Nathan Deal (R) and StudentsFirst Georgia supported the measure, while the Georgia Association of Educators and the Georgia Parent-Teacher Association opposed Amendment 1. The measure was defeated on November 8, 2016.
|
A "yes" vote supported authorizing the state to form an Opportunity School District that would govern certain elementary and secondary schools determined to be "chronically failing."[5]
|
|
A "no" vote opposed authorizing the state to form an Opportunity School District that would govern certain elementary and secondary schools determined to be "chronically failing," thereby continuing to have school boards/districts supervise respective schools.[5]
|
Board members expressed concerns about state intervention in school administration after approving resolutions of opposition. "All this does is take authority away from, not just local school systems, but from local taxpayers and parents," said Barrow County board member Lynn Stevens (R).[6] Cherokee County board chair Kyla Cromer (R) said, "The big part of this in my mind is that as a member of this school board our job is to protect the children of Cherokee County, and I see no benefit in this to them."[7] "Why doesn’t the state give local boards the finances to be able to do the things that they’re saying they can do?" said Newton County board member Almond Turner (D).[7] Richmond County board president Helen Minchew expressed concern about allowing the state to take control over local schools, saying "we have a way of communicating, we visit our schools, we stay in touch, and it's the essence of local control."[8]
The following table lists basic information on resolutions of opposition approved by school boards with November 2016 elections covered by Ballotpedia:
Proponents of the amendment argued that new solutions were needed for the district's low-performing schools. According to Georgia Leads on Education, 127 Georgia schools were considered to be failing by the Governor's Office of Student Achievement in September 2016. Schools are marked as failing if they received a College and Career Ready Performance Index (CCRPI) score that was below 60 in 2013, 2014, and 2015. The state had 181 school districts with over 2,200 schools in the September 2016 report. Dougherty County School System (4) and Richmond County School System (19) were two districts with November 2016 elections that had schools on the list and opposed the amendment. Below is a table showing the official failing schools and their respective districts from September 2016:[15][16][17]
Official list of failing schools
|
District
|
School
|
Atlanta Public Schools |
Schools Bethune Elementary School
|
Atlanta Public Schools |
Boyd Elementary School
|
Atlanta Public Schools |
Connally Elementary School
|
Atlanta Public Schools |
Continental Colony Elementary School
|
Atlanta Public Schools |
D. H. Stanton Elementary School
|
Atlanta Public Schools |
Douglass High School
|
Atlanta Public Schools |
Dunbar Elementary School
|
Atlanta Public Schools |
F. L. Stanton Elementary School
|
Atlanta Public Schools |
Fain Elementary School
|
Atlanta Public Schools |
Gideons Elementary School
|
Atlanta Public Schools |
Grove Park Intermediate School
|
Atlanta Public Schools |
Intown Charter Academy
|
Atlanta Public Schools |
Kimberly Elementary School
|
Atlanta Public Schools |
Miles Intermediate School
|
Atlanta Public Schools |
Perkerson Elementary School
|
Atlanta Public Schools |
Peyton Forest Elementary School
|
Atlanta Public Schools |
School of Technology at Carver
|
Atlanta Public Schools |
Scott Elementary School
|
Atlanta Public Schools |
Slater Elementary School
|
Atlanta Public Schools |
Thomasville Heights Elementary School
|
Atlanta Public Schools |
Towns Elementary School
|
Atlanta Public Schools |
Young Middle School
|
Bibb County |
Appling Middle School
|
Bibb County |
Ballard Hudson Middle School
|
Bibb County |
Bloomfield Middle School
|
Bibb County |
Brookdale Elementary School
|
Bibb County |
Bruce Elementary School
|
Bibb County |
Burghard Elementary School
|
Bibb County |
Hartley Elementary School
|
Bibb County |
Ingram/Pye Elementary School
|
Bibb County |
King - Danforth Elementary School
|
Bibb County |
Rice Elementary School
|
Bibb County |
Riley Elementary School
|
Bibb County |
Southwest High School
|
Bibb County |
Williams Elementary School
|
Calhoun County |
Calhoun County Elementary School
|
Chatham County |
DeRenne Middle School
|
Chatham County |
Haven Elementary School
|
Chatham County |
Hodge Elementary School
|
Chatham County |
Mercer Middle School
|
Chatham County |
Myers Middle School
|
Chatham County |
Otis J Brock III Elementary School
|
Chattahoochee County |
Chattahoochee County Middle School
|
Clarke County |
Gaines Elementary School
|
Colquitt County |
Cox Elementary School
|
DeKalb County |
Allgood Elementary School
|
DeKalb County |
Browns Mill Elementary School
|
DeKalb County |
Canby Lane Elementary School
|
DeKalb County |
Cedar Grove Elementary School
|
DeKalb County |
Cedar Grove Middle School
|
DeKalb County |
Chapel Hill Elementary School
|
DeKalb County |
Clifton Elementary School
|
DeKalb County |
Columbia Elementary School
|
DeKalb County |
Dunaire Elementary School
|
DeKalb County |
Eldridge L. Miller Elementary School
|
DeKalb County |
Fairington Elementary School
|
DeKalb County |
Flat Rock Elementary School
|
DeKalb County |
Flat Shoals Elementary School
|
DeKalb County |
Freedom Middle School
|
DeKalb County |
Knollwood Elementary School
|
DeKalb County |
McNair Middle School
|
DeKalb County |
Meadowview Elementary School
|
DeKalb County |
Midway Elementary School
|
DeKalb County |
Montclair Elementary School
|
DeKalb County |
Oakview Elementary
|
DeKalb County |
Panola Way Elementary School
|
DeKalb County |
Redan Elementary School
|
DeKalb County |
Ronald E McNair Discover Learning Academy
|
DeKalb County |
Snapfinger Elementary School
|
DeKalb County |
Stone Mountain High School
|
DeKalb County |
Stoneview Elementary School
|
DeKalb County |
Toney Elementary School
|
DeKalb County |
Woodward Elementary School
|
Dooly County |
Dooly County Elementary School
|
Dooly County |
Dooly County Middle School
|
Dougherty County |
Alice Coachman Elementary School
|
Dougherty County |
Morningside Elementary School
|
Dougherty County |
Northside Elementary School
|
Dougherty County |
Southside Middle School
|
Dublin City |
Saxon Heights
|
Fulton County |
Banneker High School
|
Fulton County |
Creekside High School
|
Fulton County |
Feldwood Elementary School
|
Fulton County |
Hamilton E. Holmes Elementary
|
Fulton County |
Heritage Elementary School
|
Fulton County |
Liberty Point Elementary School
|
Fulton County |
McNair Middle School
|
Fulton County |
Mount Olive Elementary School
|
Fulton County |
Parklane Elementary School
|
Fulton County |
Woodland Middle School
|
Macon County |
Macon County Elementary School
|
Meriwether County |
Manchester Middle School
|
Muscogee County |
Baker Middle School
|
Muscogee County |
Davis Elementary School
|
Muscogee County |
Dawson Elementary School
|
Muscogee County |
Forrest Road Elementary School
|
Muscogee County |
Fox Elementary School
|
Muscogee County |
Lonnie Jackson Academy
|
Muscogee County |
Martin Luther King, Jr. Elementary School
|
Muscogee County |
South Columbus Elementary School
|
Randolph County |
Randolph Clay Middle School
|
Richmond County |
Bayvale Elementary School
|
Richmond County |
Butler High School
|
Richmond County |
Diamond Lakes Elementary School
|
Richmond County |
Glenn Hills Elementary School
|
Richmond County |
Glenn Hills High School
|
Richmond County |
Glenn Hills Middle School
|
Richmond County |
Hains Elementary School
|
Richmond County |
Jamestown Elementary School
|
Richmond County |
Jenkins-White Elementary Charter School
|
Richmond County |
Josey High School
|
Richmond County |
Lamar - Milledge Elementary School
|
Richmond County |
Meadowbrook Elementary School
|
Richmond County |
Murphey Middle Charter School
|
Richmond County |
Sego Middle School
|
Richmond County |
Spirit Creek Middle School
|
Richmond County |
Terrace Manor Elementary School
|
Richmond County |
W.S. Hornsby K-8 School
|
Richmond County |
Wheeless Road Elementary School
|
Richmond County |
Wilkinson Gardens Elementary School
|
Spalding County |
Kennedy Road Middle School
|
State Charter Schools |
Atlanta Heights Charter School
|
State Charter Schools |
Graduation Achievement Charter High School (formerly Provost Academy)
|
State Charter Schools |
Ivy Preparatory Young Men's Leadership Academy School
|
Sumter County |
Sarah Cobb Elementary School
|
Talbot County |
Central Elementary/High School
|
Twiggs County |
Twiggs County High School
|
Candidate survey
About the district
- See also: Fayette County Board of Education, Georgia
Fayette County Board of Education is located in Fayette County, Georgia
Fayette County Board of Education is located in Fayette County, Georgia. The county seat of Fayette County is Fayetteville. Fayette County was home to 106,567 residents in 2013, according to the United States Census Bureau.[18] The district was the 20th-largest school district in the state in the 2013–2014 school year and served 20,159 students.[19]
Demographics
Fayette County outperformed the state of Georgia in terms of higher education achievement and median household income in 2012. The United States Census Bureau found that 42.1 percent of Fayette County residents aged 25 years and older had attained a bachelor's degree, compared to 27.8 percent for Georgia as a whole. The median household income in Fayette County was $81,242, compared to $49,604 for the state of Georgia. The poverty rate in Fayette County was 6.7 percent, compared to 17.4 percent for the entire state.[18]
Racial Demographics, 2013[18]
|
Race
|
Fayette County (%)
|
Georgia (%)
|
White |
72.5 |
62.8
|
Black or African American |
20.9 |
31.2
|
American Indian and Alaska Native |
0.4 |
0.5
|
Asian |
4.2 |
3.5
|
Native Hawaiian and Other Pacific Islander |
0.1 |
0.1
|
Two or More Races |
1.9 |
1.8
|
Hispanic or Latino |
6.7 |
9.2
|
|
Presidential Voting Pattern, Fayette County[20]
|
Year
|
Democratic Vote (%)
|
Republican Vote (%)
|
Other Vote (%)
|
2012 |
33.7 |
65.0 |
1.3
|
2008 |
34.2 |
64.9 |
0.9
|
2004 |
28.3 |
71.1 |
0.6
|
2000 |
28.2 |
69.5 |
2.3
|
|
Note: Percentages for race and ethnicity may add up to more than 100 percent because respondents may report more than one race and the Hispanic/Latino ethnicity may be selected in conjunction with any race. Read more about race and ethnicity in the census here.
Recent news
The link below is to the most recent stories in a Google news search for the terms 'Fayette County Board of Education' 'Georgia'. These results are automatically generated from Google. Ballotpedia does not curate or endorse these articles.
See also
External links
- ↑ Georgia Secretary of State, "Qualifying Candidate Information," accessed April 18, 2016
- ↑ Georgia Secretary of State, "2016 Qualifying: Reference Calendar & Documents," accessed March 11, 2016
- ↑ Georgia Secretary of State, "2016 Elections and Voter Registration Calendar," accessed March 11, 2016
- ↑ Easy Campaign Finance Portal, "Home," accessed November 2, 2016
- ↑ 5.0 5.1 Open States, "Senate Resolution 287," accessed April 11, 2016
- ↑ Barrow Journal, "BOE joins OSD opposition," September 14, 2016
- ↑ 7.0 7.1 The Columbia County News-Times, "School boards speak out against OSD amendment," September 18, 2016
- ↑ 8.0 8.1 WorldNow, "Richmond County School Board members call for defeat of "Opportunity School District" bill," August 23, 2016
- ↑ Barrow County School System, "Called Board Meeting 9/13/2016 - 6:00 PM," September 13, 2016
- ↑ Atlanta Journal-Constitution, "Cherokee County Board moves to oppose Deal’s Opportunity Schools," September 26, 2016
- ↑ Clayton County Public Schools, "Board Meeting-Tuesday, September 6, 2016," September 6, 2016
- ↑ NBC 12, "Dougherty Co. School Board openly opposes OSD," September 28, 2016
- ↑ Griffin Journal, "Fayette County opposes schools amendment," August 19, 2016
- ↑ Newton County Schools, "Newton Board of Education Adopts Resolution Opposing Governor’s Opportunity School District," June 23, 2016
- ↑ Cite error: Invalid
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tag; no text was provided for refs named List
- ↑ Georgia Department of Education, "Schools and Districts," accessed September 29, 2016
- ↑ Georgia Department of Education, "College and Career Ready Performance Index," accessed September 29, 2016
- ↑ 18.0 18.1 18.2 United States Census Bureau, "Fayette County, Georgia," accessed May 14, 2014
- ↑ National Center for Education Statistics, "ELSI Table Generator," accessed November 16, 2015
- ↑ Georgia Secretary of State, "Current and Past Election Results," accessed July 1, 2014