Monday June 9th, 2025 11:56AM

Deal unveils Opportunity School District legislation

By Staff
ATLANTA - Gov. Nathan Deal's Senate floor leader Butch Miller (R-Gainesville) Thursday introduced legislation to create an Opportunity School District that will allow the state to temporarily step in to assist chronically failing schools, giving students and parents hope for a better future.<br /> <br /> "While Georgia boasts many schools that achieve academic excellence every year, we still have too many schools where students have little hope of attaining the skills they need to succeed in the workforce or in higher education," said Deal. "We have a moral duty to do everything we can to help these children. Failing schools keep the cycle of poverty spinning from one generation to the next. Education provides the only chance for breaking that cycle. When we talk about helping failing schools, we're talking about rescuing children. I stand firm on the principle that every child can learn, and I stand equally firm in the belief that the status quo isn't working."<br /> <br /> In the governor's proposal, persistently failing schools are defined as those scoring below 60 on the Georgia Department of Education's accountability measure, the College and Career Performance Index (CCRPI), for three consecutive years. <br /> <br /> The Opportunity School District would take in no more than 20 schools per year, meaning it would govern no more than 100 at any given time. Schools would stay in the district for no less than five years but no more than 10 years.<br /> <br /> "I would like nothing more than for the need for the Opportunity School District to decline every year; that would show our reforms are working," Deal said. "But everyone
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