Young Democrats, residents urge board action after teacher video; parents press for more youth programs after Lovejoy shootings

Clayton County Board of Education · November 3, 2025

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Summary

Public commenters at the Nov. 3 Clayton County school board meeting called for accountability after a teacher's inflammatory video and urged the district to address youth violence in the Lovejoy community and expand sports and extracurriculars to engage students.

At the Clayton County Board of Education meeting on Nov. 3, community members used public comment to press the board on two distinct issues: accountability for a classroom video that a speaker called "inflammatory" and the surge of youth violence in the Lovejoy area.

Cheryl Gurel, vice president of the Young Democrats of Clayton County, said a video had emerged of a teacher making statements that she described as "inflammatory, but profoundly disrespectful, suggesting that women should not be educated." Gurel told the board the remarks were harmful to students and undermined the inclusive atmosphere schools must maintain. She thanked the board "for acting swiftly, investigating thoroughly, and ensuring accountability," and said the Young Democrats would donate school supplies to support students district-wide.

Latanya Jean Funny, a former Clayton County teacher and parent, addressed a series of recent youth deaths in the Lovejoy community and urged the board to treat the crisis with urgency. "How many teenage boys would need to die before everyone in this boardroom ascends to this community?" she asked. Funny called for individualized student supports, more small-group programming, town-hall meetings, and expanded sports and extracurricular opportunities, saying low participation is an early indicator of disengagement. She noted that at a recent regional meet only one Jonesboro High School girl represented the school in cross-country and asked the district to examine participation rates in elementary and middle schools to build pipelines to high-school athletics.

Board members did not respond to speakers during the public comment period, consistent with the board's public participation policy. The comments were recorded by the board and flagged as issues that may be added to a future agenda for possible action or investigation by the administration.