Tensions run high in contest for District 21 seat
by Rebecca Johnston
rjohnston@cherokeetribune.com
July 28, 2012 10:00 PM | 2284 views | 9 9 comments | 7 7 recommendations | email to a friend | print
The race for Senate District 21 has seen tensions running high, as Senate Majority Leader Chip Rogers (R-Woodstock) battles it out against challenger Brandon Beach, a member of the state Department of Transportation Board, in the Republican primary.

Negative mailers targeted both candidates and as a series of ethics complaints against each candidate have surfaced during the hotly debated race.

Rogers, 44, has served 10 years in the General Assembly and four of those as Senate majority leader.

Beach, 51, is a former Alpharetta City Council member and president and CEO of the North Fulton Chamber of Commerce.

Both say those experiences have helped prepared them for the job they seek.

Beach says his years in the business arena have helped prepare him.

“I understand private sector job creation. I have seen firsthand the impact of over-regulation; taxation and litigation on businesses of all sizes. I believe,” Beach said on what makes him most qualified.

Rogers says his position as a leader among conservatives make him the best candidate.

“As Senate Majority Leader I have been, and will continue to be, the leading conservative voice in Georgia government,” Rogers said. “I am fully committed to liberty and believe Georgia can be the most prosperous and well-educated state in America if we promote economic, education, and personal freedom.”

At the heart of the race has been the battle in Cherokee County about charter schools and local control.

Rogers says he supports House Resolution 1162, which goes to voters in November and broadens the state’s powers in school choice.

“I trust the voters of the state of Georgia, so yes, I support this Resolution. I cannot imagine anyone who would oppose allowing the voters to make this decision,’ Roger said. “The Resolution clearly defines that the tax dollars to support public charter schools will not come at the expense of regular public schools. However, it is important to remember funding is for students, not systems or school buildings. I support funding students for the education their parents determine is best, not what government thinks is best.”

Beach says he is against the measure.

“While HR 1162 is now in the voter’s hands, I cannot support it,” Beach said. “The basic tenet of the Republican platform is local control. Charter schools should be authorized by local school boards not a distant unelected board in Atlanta.”

Both men say they are looking for new answers for state education funding.

Beach says Quality Basic Education is broken and the state needs to find a new formula to send more money to schools.

“Great education is the cornerstone of vibrant and prosperous communities,” Beach said. “Georgia needs a workable and reliable formula so school systems can budget.”

Since 2002 the state share of kindergarten through 12th grade education funding for Cherokee has dropped from a 60/40 state local split to the current split of 46/53, Beach said.

“We must reform the “Fair Share” program that sends the first 5 mills of your school tax to the state to be spread around to other districts. The state needs to impose a revenue cap with this program,” Beach said.

Rogers blasted QBE, calling it a Democratic formula.

“QBE is a disaster,” he said. “It has long ago outlived its usefulness. State spending on K-12 education to Cherokee County has increased the last 10 years from $100 million to $148 million.”

“The per-pupil spending has also increased, accounting for all student growth. However, the judgment of our educational system should be based on raising student performance and graduating kids from high school, not how much money we spend,” Rogers said.

Comments
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WeNeedBeach
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July 31, 2012
I wouldn't trust Chip further than I could throw Danny Dukes.

Voted for Read, Beach and Caldwell. Time for a shift.
JustTheFactsPlease
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July 30, 2012
Chip says QBE is a disaster, and yet as the Senate Majority leader he has done nothing to change it, correct it or improve it. In fact, until he was running for re-election, he never even mentioned it and made mistakes trying to explain how it worked. You'll notice there's no mention of what he would do to improve this and to stop putting more of the burden on local school boards and taxpayers. That's because he has no intention of doing anything about it.
JustTheFactsPlease
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July 30, 2012
Chip just want the voucher proposal to pass so we can pay for his kid's private school education. I don't trust a man handling the public education fund who stated that he doesn't trust his kids being in a class with someone who doesn't share his values (read: Public school teachers). He fails to mention that the state funding sends money meant for the LOCAL BOE to spend on the public schools where the budget is transparent ..not publicly available. Try your best to find the financials for Cherokee Charter. Danny Dukes, CFO of failed Appalachian Bank is the CPA and won't answer the questions. He fails to even list Appalachian or his role with Cherokee Charter in his debates, ads or robo-calls. Dukes is a failure with finances and wants our taxpayer money in a secretive account, not monitored.Chip fails to mention his connection with Charter Schools USA..the failed scores of their FL schools or the multi-million dollar lawsuit they currently face on a child molestation lawfsuit. Guess who will be helping with the legal fight and settlement ('cause there will be one)on this FL case..that's right GA taxpayers because of the for-profit corporation who have set up this fiasco in our county with GA Taxpayer funding, compliments of Chip Rogers.
GoodScout
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July 30, 2012
QBE worked great ... until we let the Republican Party take over the state legislature and screw it up!
Jimmy James
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July 30, 2012
Exactly!! Especially since "they" aren't even fully funding it!
buzz fuzz
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July 29, 2012
Mr. Beach's desire to increase our sales tax 16.6% at the expense of low income and elderly citizens will lead to his defeat on July 31. Low income and elderly can not afford to have their groceries taxed by Mr. Beach. Senator Rogers has led a tireless fight against T Splost in the ARC and his credibility with the NAACP, Black Ministers, the Sierra Club and Moderate and Conservative Groups (TRUTH IN TRAFFIC), regarding PAINFUL TAXATION will lead to a comfortable victory on July 31.
JustTheFactsPlease
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July 30, 2012
Wow, have you been sold a false bill of goods. Rogers voted FOR the TSPLOST 4 times before deciding that it was going to go badly for him and he switched to "let the voters decide". It wouldn't even be a possibility on the ballot without Chip. If it goes through, it's not the voters, it's Chip. He engineered the entire thing, thinking he would get credit for creating jobs, then caught a lot of flack. He's whoever's dog he's hunting with.IF Chip wins, it will only get uncomfortable for you because he will sell you down the river in a heartbeat.
cheriokeewarrior78
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July 29, 2012
Mr Rogers is almost correct the money has gone up but it includes all the money for K-16 which is all the increase to the University System of GA. We have added thousands more children but have been doing more with less funding.
Robert James
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July 30, 2012
Sounds like Chip knows what he is talking about, school choice should be in the hands of the parents and not in the hands of politicins on a board. personal freedom I love it. Go Chip
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