Pubdate: Wed, 10 May 2006
Source: Clayton News Daily (Jonesboro, GA)
Copyright: 2006 Clayton News Daily
Contact:  http://www.news-daily.com/
Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/3488
Author: Jeffery Whitfield
Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/find?225 (Students - United States)

LOVEJOY ASSISTANT PRINCIPAL OUSTED

He's Accused Of Letting Students Smoke Pot And Drink At His House

The Georgia assistant principal of the year for 2005  has been ousted 
from his position in Clayton County  after being accused of failing 
to act while students  consumed alcohol and used marijuana in his 
home at the  end of 2005, according to documents obtained from the  district.

The Clayton County Board of Education last week  suspended Lovejoy 
High School Assistant Principal  Christopher Johnson without pay 
through June 30, the  last day of his contract as well as the 
school's fiscal  year. Gary Sams, an attorney for the district, 
said  Johnson's contract for the next school year will not be  renewed.

Superintendent Barbara Pulliam had recommended that  Johnson's 
contract with the board not be renewed and a  hearing tribunal upheld 
her recommendation. She  notified him in a March 22 letter that he 
would be  suspended and his contract not renewed pending the  tribunal hearing.

Johnson, who was named the Affiliated Georgia School  Leaders 
Assistant Principal of the Year last year,  denies all allegations 
and findings from the hearing  tribunal, according to his attorney, 
Deirdre  Stephens-Johnson, who spoke on his behalf.

Stephens-Johnson said she thought the evidence did not  support the 
tribunal's findings.

Evidence presented was contradictory and many initial  statements 
were recanted by witnesses, Stephens-Johnson  said.

"I was surprised by the outcome as the hearing  progressed," she said.

Stephens-Johnson said that her client has not chosen  whether to 
appeal the decision.

Johnson currently is looking for employment and would  prefer to work 
with young people and continue his  career in education, Stephens-Johnson said.

The three-member hearing tribunal, consisting of  board-appointed 
members, heard the case on April 11 and  12. It convened to consider 
charges, findings of fact  and issue a recommendation. The tribunal 
concluded that  Johnson violated standards of ethics educators are 
required to adhere to.

The hearing tribunal found that Johnson consumed  alcoholic beverages 
in the presence of students, failed  to maintain a professional 
relationship with students  at all times and was aware that a student 
used  marijuana in his home and failed to report the incident  in a 
timely manner.

School officials also alleged Johnson submitted a  letter containing 
"incorrect" facts used by Henry  County courts, Sams said.

Documents from the school system allege that Johnson  wrote a letter 
on school system stationary that  contained "misleading information" 
about the intent of  a social gathering on Dec. 20, 2005.

A student was pulled over in Henry County after the  gathering for 
traffic and curfew violations, Pulliam  said in her letter to 
Johnson. The student is 17 years  old.

Johnson called the gathering at his home a "field trip"  and 
submitted a letter to Henry County judicial  authorities to get the 
student out of trouble,  according to system documents. Pulliam said 
Johnson misled Henry County authorities about "why the student  was 
operating a vehicle after midnight" in violation of  a limited permit.

The student was summoned to appear in Henry County  State Court on 
March 2 and the curfew violation was  dismissed based on the letter 
submitted by Johnson.

Pulliam also alleged that Johnson let the same student  "ingest 
marijuana in his home and failed to make a  report of the incident to 
any official or the student's  parents at the time of the incident," 
according to  system documents.

Henry County Solicitor General Charles Spahos said the  letter was 
mistakenly returned to the student and is no  longer in the case 
file. He said he is waiting for a  transcript from the Clayton County 
hearing to determine  whether a crime took place.

"We're continuing to investigate," said Spahos. "I'm  going to look 
at every bit of it."

Charles White, a spokesman for Clayton County Public  Schools, said 
in a statement that school officials had  not reported any of the 
alleged incidents to law  enforcement officials.

"Under the advice of council, no report was made to law  enforcement 
officials regarding alleged student  activity," he said in the statement.

Parents of Lovejoy High students said they supported  Johnson and 
questioned the tribunal hearing's decision.

"From what I heard and what I saw for the tribunal  hearing for Mr. 
Johnson, there was no concrete proof  that any of those violations 
occurred," said Sandra  McPhail, president of the parent teacher 
student  association from Lovejoy High School who attended the  hearing.

Ganus Anderson, whose two sons attend Lovejoy High and  have worked 
with Johnson as part of a student group,  said that he supports him 
and questioned the tribunal.

Johnson had a "perfect" record and parents were unaware  of any 
wrongdoing, he said.

"I think he was the people's choice," said Anderson,  who added that 
he and other parents had hoped Johnson  would've been named principal 
of Lovejoy High.

Mr. Johnson received degrees from South Carolina State  University, 
North Carolina State University,  Jacksonville State University and 
Georgia Southern  University. He has just completed his Doctor of 
Education Administration from Georgia Southern  University.

He started his professional education career as a bus  driver as well 
as a middle school mathematics teacher.  He has served as an 
assistant principal in Douglas  County and Clayton County. His 
current assignment was  the Lovejoy High School Freshman Academy. One 
teacher at the school said he believes Johnson has held 
that  position for two years.

Dr. Samuel Jackson, then interim Principal of Lovejoy,  gave the 
credit to Mr. Johnson for "his initiatives and  collaboration with 
freshmen teachers, guidance  counselors, PTSA members, parents, and 
other members in  the community, the Freshmen Academy at Lovejoy is 
serving as a model for other schools in the county,"  according to 
the Affiliated Georgia School Leaders  website.

The board took away the interim status and named  Jackson the 
school's principal earlier this month.

Officials said they plan to fill the position but are  not sure when 
a replacement will be named.
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MAP posted-by: Jay Bergstrom