Dunwoody reporter. (Sandy Springs, GA) 20??-current, February 22, 2013, Image 3
COMMUNITY Gardener rescues native plants BY TOM ODER Before construction of the controver sial Brook Run trail cranked up, Dun- woody gardener Bonnie Barton orga nized efforts to rescue wildflowers and other native plants from the path of the multi-use trail. One recent Saturday, Barton pulled a wheelbarrow loaded with boxes and a shovel through the forest behind the Brook Run dog park. She stopped at various places to dig up clumps of gin ger, crane-fly orchids, Christmas fern, beech trees and snake root. “Look at this beautiful dirt with these beautiful worms!” Barton exclaimed as she slid a shovel through the leaf litter and into the soft, humus-rich earth of the forest floor. By her count, the Dunwoody Gar den Club member estimates she dug up a thousand plants that grew in the path of the trail. The plants will be replanted in areas of the park away from the con struction work, she said. She secured permission from city of ficials to “rescue” the native plants. City Parks and Recreation Director Brent Walker gave the OK to remove and relo cate them, she said. Walker recommended the plants be relocated to an area beside the Commu nity Garden as a place where the plants could be re-located and remain undis turbed, Barton said. TOM ODER Bonnie Barton digs up a clump of native orchids in Brook Run Park. The plants are in the path of the multi-use trail the city is building. “Digging was one thing, but hauling plants out was the hardest job,” Barton said. Board actions frustrate parents CONTINUED FROM PAGE 1 The accrediting agency AdvancED placed the DeKalb system on accreditation probation last year because of actions by the board. That has convinced some parents that the board needs to be replaced. “I think that if we do not change the current board, were going to lose ac creditation down the line,” Smith said. Parents said they still feel their chil drens’ schools are doing a fine job. But they worry that things could change. Some said they’ve heard neighbors talk recently about pulling their children from public schools and sending them to private schools. Parents have orga nized campaigns writing letters to Gov. Nathan Deal asking for state action. Some worry that businesses or new resi dents will choose to locate elsewhere be cause of the DeKalb schools’ problems. And some Dunwoody officials want their own, separately accreditated schools. “People are not considering public schools as a viable option right now,” said Kim Gokce, president of the Cross Keys Foundation, which supports Cross Keys High School in Brookhaven. “It’s being overshadowed by gov ernance problems. That’s the ultimate crime, in my opinion, that’s going on right now.” In recent weeks, the board has tak- DUN en several actions that have stirred new complaints from parents that board members are not deailing properly with the threat of probation. The board replaced the school super intendent. After board members could not elect a new chairman, the board’s sitting chairman resigned the post. The board took state officials to court. “I certainly don’t want us to be on probation, but we re on probation for a reason,” Gokce said. “Winning the probation fight is not a priority for me. Addressing the funda mental reasons for probation is a prior ity for me. ...I’m concerned that they’re focused on winning the fight.” The board’s legal challenge to a pro cess allowing state officials to remove DeKalb board members especially an gered some parents. Stacey Harris, who has two children in Austin Elementary, said the action was a waste of money. “They’re taking away money from my children,” she said. Shari Wassell, co-president of the Dunwoody Elementary PTO, said many of her neighbors were drawn to the com munity by the quality of the schools. 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