ATLANTA —
Georgians have approved a constitutional amendment that would allow a new state board to issue charters for private operators to run independent public schools.
With 94 percent of precincts reporting, 1.89 million voters — or 58 percent — supported the proposal. A total of 1.37 million or 42 percent opposed it.
Gov. Nathan Deal and school choice advocates pitched the amendment as a way to give Georgia families more educational options. State Superintendent John Barge led educator groups in opposition, saying it would lessen local control and siphon public money away from existing schools.
Control over charters now rests mostly with local school boards, though operators who are denied can appeal to the state Board of Education. Georgia has about 200 charter schools already. They will not be immediately affected by the outcome.
Election-State
Georgia voters OK charter schools amendment
- Election-State
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Kingston says Republican Senate primary will be very focused
U.S. Rep. Jack Kingston, R-Savannah, calls the federal Affordable Care Act a “train wreck waiting to happen.”
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“Business, especially businesses with 50 to 200 employees, don’t know exactly what is expected of them and how to comply with it. They are very apprehensive,” he said. “Just when we need them to be taking risks and expanding and creating jobs, they have this enormous uncertainty that’s weighing them down.” - Congressman Broun says he is running for Senate
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- Charter school amendment on its way to approval
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- Nov 6, 2012
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- Oct 25, 2012
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- Oct 20, 2012
- Democratic Rep. Barrow courting Republican voters
- Aug 21, 2012
- Voters to cast ballots in north Georgia congressional race
- GOP runoff will decide opponent for Rep. Barrow
- Jul 23, 2012
- Two legislative candidates ruled ineligible
- Jun 28, 2012
- GOP rivals debate their votes for Democrats
- Feds sue Georgia over Aug. 21 runoff election
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Kingston says Republican Senate primary will be very focused



