COMMUNITY
WELLNESS
Encore partnership
Put Litter in Its Place
Avoiding salmonella
The DeKalb NAACP is partnering with the “I Am a Father 5K Run/Walk” again in its second annual Juneteenth celebration. 4
In warmer weather, individuals and families can keep the bacteria at bay by following these tips – clean, separate, and chill. 9
Let’s Do Our Part to Keep DeKalb Beautiful
EAST ATLANTA • DECATUR • STONE MOUNTAIN • LITHONIA • AVONDALE ESTATES • CLARKSTON • ELLENWOOD • PINE LAKE • REDAN • SCOTTDALE • TUCKER • STONECREST
June 9, 2018
Copyright © 2018 CrossRoadsNews, Inc.
Volume 24, Number 6
www.crossroadsnews.com
DeKalb Schools sues Atlanta over Emory annexation By Jennifer Ffrench Parker
DeKalb Schools is suing the city of Atlanta over its ordinance that allows Atlanta Public Schools to take up to nine DeKalb students and more than $2 million in revenues from the district. The district filed the lawsuit on June 4 in Fulton County Superior Court. It is seeking an injunction to stop APS from enrolling the DeKalb students by its July 1 deadline and begin taking the property taxes from it. Dr. R. Stephen Green, the district’s superintendent, said they need the injunction as soon as possible to stop the transfer of the district’s resources into the coffers of APS. “If we get the injunction, the annexation is off,” he said June 5. “It freezes everything so that we can develop a proper
“We have been seeking a resolution that would not negatively affect us,” he said. “I am still hopeful that we can come together and work out a solution that does no harm to us.” Green calls the lawsuit a last resort. “A preferable outcome is that we sit down at the table and work out a favorable agreement,” he said. “If we come together, we could work out an intergovernmental agreement or work through other solutions.” Stephen Green The dispute centers around the annexation of 744 acres which include Emory University, the Centers for Disease protocol for moving forward.” Control and Prevention, and Children’s Healthcare of Atlanta The lawsuit comes after months of DCSD trying to bring into the city of Atlanta. the city of Atlanta and Atlanta Public School to the table for DCSD had previously had supported the annexation on discussions. the understanding the annexed properties would remain Green said they tried to get the parties to sit down, and when that failed they had no option but to go to court. Please LAWSUIT, page 3
“We have been seeking a resolution that would not negatively affect us. I am still hopeful that we can come together and work out a solution that does no harm to us.”
Troop connects girls with their moms in prison Girl Scouts program tends relationship On the last Saturday of each month, while most of their peers are sleeping in, a handful of DeKalb schoolgirls travel more than 60 miles to Lee Arrendale State Prison in Alto, Ga., where they have a 9:30 a.m. meeting with their mothers. During the two-hour supervised session, the mothers and daughters talk about school, boys, and the future. They discuss past mistakes and how to make good decisions, they participate in scout-based activities, and they share a prison meal. The DeKalb girls are members of Troop 17060, part of the nationwide Girl Scouts Beyond Bars program, introduced in Georgia in September 2017 to connect school-aged girls with their incarcerated mothers. One of the girls not only has to visit her mother in prison – her grandmother is also behind bars at a separate facility. There are a dozen members of Troop 17060, ages 7 to 16, who share this common bond as daughters of Lee Arrendale inmates. Most of the girls live with aunts and uncles or grandparents, because their fathers are also either incarcerated or otherwise absent. Troop leader Jessica Sykes says that being without their fathers is a problem for thousands of girls across Georgia. “I’m yet to meet a dad,” said Sykes, an Atlantabased volunteer. Sykes fought red tape for more than three years to get the pilot Girl Scouts Beyond Bars program Jessica Sykes started at Lee Arrendale with support from the Georgia Department of Corrections and Girl Scouts of Historic Georgia, hearing eight “no”s before a “yes.” Girl Scouts Beyond Bars, which started
Incarcerated mothers and their daughters participate in the Girl Scouts Beyond Bars program at Lee Arrendale State Prison in Alto, Georgia.
in Maryland about 25 years ago, is also now operating in states such as Florida, Ohio, Arizona, Texas, Washington and Oregon. Sykes says there is a 70 percent chance that the daughters of incarcerated women will end up behind bars themselves. “It’s sad,” said Sykes, who lost her own mother to breast cancer as a 13-year-old and is trying to save these young girls from becoming a statistic. “These girls need help.” Sykes is the founder and executive director of The Motherless Village of Hope, a nonprofit that mentors girls who have lost their mothers to death or incarceration. She found out about the Girl Scouts Beyond Bars program in other states and brought it to Georgia. She said she has seen many local young girls heading down the wrong path, including a Newton County teenager who ran away
with the intention of committing a crime so she could be reunited with her mother in prison. “That’s all she wanted – to be with her mom,” Sykes said. “What’s important to me with this program is that communication is there between moms and daughters, they get to sit down and talk on a regular basis.” Sykes says it’s also important for young girls to hear their mothers explain their mistakes and how they got to be in prison, so history doesn’t repeat. “They need to hear that from their own mother’s mouth,” she said. “Most of the time you hear a mother say she had a good upbringing and went to church but just made some bad decisions.” Sykes already sees the benefits to both mothers and daughters participating in the program. She hopes to solidify the program
at Lee Arrendale before expanding it to other Georgia prisons. Expansion will require sponsorship or funding, which Sykes calls “our biggest hiccup right now.” “Girl Scouts pays for the troop uniforms and the prison provides the meals, but that’s it,” Sykes said. Her ultimate goal is to offer young girls the tools they need to move forward in a positive direction with their lives, despite their mothers being imprisoned. Sykes says some of the mothers will never get out of jail. For others, their daughters will be in their 40s when they’re released. “My job, if I possibly can, is to make sure these girls have good relationships with their mothers,” Sykes said. “I know what it feels Please see TROOP, page 4