Scheidt vs. incumbent McCall in School Board debate
News April 21, 2022
FORSYTH COUNTY, Ga. – For 12 months, parents of school children in the Forsyth County School System have clamored for a change in an increasingly woke Board of Education. During Wednesday’s Republican Party debate with School Board incumbent Wes McCall, Dennis Scheidt promised to be a strong advocate for that change.
Scheidt, said, “I’ve been watching and have been appalled at what has been happening in our school system. Schools are doing things parents should be doing.” He called for greater transparency, increased parental participation in decision making, zero-based budgeting and an end to social justice programs.
“As I look at DEI, SEL and CRT, those are emotional learning things that parents should be responsible for,” he said. “Sex education. Why should the schools be responsible for this? That should be a parent’s God-given right.”
Scheidt also said he would like to see change in the school system’s policy that requires parents to opt out of certain programs they object to. “What I propose is any time a survey is given to a child, or information is gleaned, that questionairre be sent to parents first so they can make that decision.”
On zero-based budgeting, Scheidt a former hospital CFO and CEO, who has an MBA in Finance said, “I believe in zero-based budgeting… don’t start with what you had last year and add to it. Start at zero and look at every dollar you want in your budget and show a reason for it.”
Month after month since April 2021 parents have attended school board meetings to complain about what their children are being taught and the Board’s seeming indifference to their concerns.
“This crisis in the school system is the fact that people don’t feel like their concerns are listened to, or heard,” said first-term incumbent McCall.
“I can say that transparency and getting back with people and answering their questions is going to be the biggest factor in restoring trust back into the school system among parents,” McCall said. But, at the same time, he said the Board had recently discussed placing restrictions on the public speaking portion of meetings, although it did not take action.
On parental involvement, he spoke about legislation passed in the General Assembly that would promote parental involvement in school systems. He also recommended parents build relationships with their students’ teachers and principals but did not present new ideas on what the school board will do to include parents in the decision-making process.
An outspoken opponent of CRT, DEI and SEL, Scheidt said he has been asked what he could do as one member of five on the Board of Education to remove those ideologies from the school system. “All you can do is what is right then try to convince other people what you believe'” he answered. “It takes one person to stand up and say, ‘I disagree.’ I’ll be that person.”
McCall did not answer the question directly but said that he met with state legislators, parent groups and fellow Board members to gain a better understanding of the issue.
In closing, McCall said, we need leadership on the Board of Education. “I have the leadership, the vision, the experience to move our schools forward.” He also said he would continue to be an involved parent regardless of the outcome of the election.
Scheidt said, “My number one issue is to represent you as a parent and to get you the answers you deserve.” He said if he is elected, would meet with parents on a quarterly basis to discuss issues and to keep them informed.
School Board debate set for April 20 in the County Administration Building
News April 13, 2022
FORSYTH COUNTY, Ga. — The Forsyth County Republican Party will host a debate between Republican candidates for the Board of Education on Wednesday, April 20 in the County Administration Building 110 East Main Street in Cumming. Doors open at 6 p.m. The debate will begin at 6:30 p.m.
Commissioner Kristen Morrissey has decided not to run for another term. Mike Valdes, a conservative and and Erin Knight will campaign to fill her seat.
In District 1, Commissioner Wes McCall is running for a second term on the Board. His opponent is Dennis Scheidt, a former chief financial officer and chief executive officer for Atlanta Hospital.
There are stark differences between the opponents in both races.
Mike Valdes a construction engineer and father of three children in the school system, is pledged to end critical race theory (CRT) and other dangerous ideologies in Forsyth schools. Knight has sided with the school board members who claim CRT is not part of the school curriculum.
McCall is a member of the Board that has come under heavy fire from conservatives who believe they have been left out of important decisions regarding what their children are being taught in public schools. He recently received harsh criticism, for having one outspoken CRT opponent removed from a school board meeting and banning her from future attendance.
Scheidt is a conservative who is pledged to keep parents in the driver’s seat in the county school system.
Board of Education Chairman McCall orders meeting room to be cleared
News March 19, 2022
FORSYTH COUNTY, Ga. – The Forsyth County Board of Education appears to be on shaky ground with respect to its conduct of the March 15 meeting and Georgia’s Open Meetings Act.
After ordering the meeting room cleared, Chairman Wes McCall, who will run for reelection in the May 24 General Primary, allowed 11 public speakers to address the Board one by one in front of an empty room. He then called for an executive session to discuss personnel matters which is allowable under the Act. But, following the executive session, McCall called the meeting back into session and with the room still empty, he called for a vote which does appear to violate the Act.
McCall, who is up for reelection in May, demanded the audience leave after a fiery and impassioned speech by Angela Hair who demanded the Board remove books that contained obscene and overtly sexual content from the school libraries.
“I’m begging, begging, begging you all to do something,” she said. She challenged Board members to take the books and read them to “your children, your mother, your preacher.”
Then she began reading the very explicit, sexual content of one book that can be found in the school libraries.
McCall immediately interrupted her and explained that reading the material was not allowed under the Board’s rules. “Why are you stopping me,” she questioned. “Don’t you like the filth you put into our libraries?” When she continued to read, McCall interrupted again saying this is unacceptable and he asked if she would follow the rules or “do you need to be removed.”
Members of the audience shouted in support of Hair but McCall banged the gavel repeatedly and called for security to clear the room.
School boards should exercise extreme caution when they move into executive session. Legal consequences can result if a public board is found to have reached decisions that should have been on an open public agenda.
One of the most common reasons for an executive session is the catch-all category of “personnel.” It is also the reason most often violated. Some boards will call an executive session for personnel reasons at the slightest hint their agenda for the evening is threatened. While hidden from public view, they decide what they’re going to say, who will say it, etc. That is a dangerous and illegal precedent.


