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To the Citizens of Fayette County,
My son is 13 years old. He’s a good student who’s never had a detention or disciplinary issue in his life. Yet, this spring, Fayette County Schools expelled him.
He wasn’t expelled for violence, drugs, threats, or anything harmful. The issue was purely technology-related—non-violent, non-disruptive, and unprecedented. In fact, this was the first time in the school’s entire history that a student was expelled for this type of incident.
We believed the decision was unjust, so we appealed to the Fayette County Board of Education. Significantly, even the chairman of the board voted to overturn the expulsion, agreeing that the punishment was extreme. Still, the majority voted to uphold it.
Determined to seek fairness, we followed Georgia law and submitted an appeal to the Georgia State Board of Education. State regulations require families to submit appeals through their local school district. We complied with every guideline, met every deadline, and requested the district use its official tribunal recording as the required transcript, a method clearly allowed by state regulations.
Then the school district went silent.
We repeatedly asked one straightforward question: Has our appeal been sent to the state?
No response.
Only after making multiple attempts via email and calls did we receive a reply—but it wasn’t an answer. Instead, the district suddenly imposed a new requirement—a written transcript—which had never been previously mentioned. Alarmingly, this new demand arrived after weeks after the appeal deadline had already passed, via a letter dated June 17 but suspiciously emailed only after our call on June 18.
This is not a misunderstanding. It is deliberate obstruction.
Why is Fayette County Schools going to such lengths to block our appeal? What are they hiding? Why introduce new rules after deadlines, ignore clear questions, and refuse transparency?
We’re fortunate enough to recognize our legal rights and continue fighting. But what about other families who might not? Many would trust the system and believe the school was acting fairly, unaware of their rights being quietly undermined. This appears to be exactly what Fayette County Schools is counting on.
This isn’t just about one child. It’s about transparency, fairness, and the fundamental right of every family in our community to appeal unjust decisions. If our school district can quietly rewrite rules and obstruct justice to avoid scrutiny, what does that mean for all Fayette County families?
We won’t let this issue be buried. The integrity of our educational system depends on accountability. Today it’s our family, but tomorrow it could easily be yours.
— A Fayette County Parent
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