Dunwoody High School needs Dunwoody citizens support! (Update!)

Update:  As I type this note at 3:20 on 8/30/18 we are less than $5K from our goal!   If you you live in Dunwoody and haven’t already, please consider donating $30!

Note from Audra:  My friend Carol wrote this letter to The Dunwoody Crier on Sunday and copied me.  I decided to wait to post until The Crier actually published it.  You can find it here on The Crier site as well.   Meanwhile….I LOVE her idea.  If every citizen of Dunwoody who has ever had a kid at DHS, ever will have a kid at DHS, or just benefits from being a citizen of our great city then they should give $30 to this campaign.   Surely almost every Dunwoody Citizen can afford $30?  #lightupthefield  Click here to donate your $30!

August 5, 2018

I write this on Back-to-School eve for DeKalb County students.

Dunwoody High School needs the help of our community.  Last week I saw a Facebook post and was reminded again today in the PTSO email of the need to better DHS’ multi-use sports (track & field, football, girls & boys lacrosse, boys & girls soccer and marching band) field. If you haven’t seen the recent improvements behind the school, you should take a look. The track looks great and beautiful bleachers have been added. Through successful fundraising of hundreds of thousand dollars through DHS’ Game On campaign, these additions and more were paid for by Dunwoody families and very generous contributors. The improvements are exciting to say the least in a school system that doesn’t fund the improvement of sports fields.

The ultimate plan for the multi-use field calls for the installation of neighborhood friendly LED lights. With the addition of the lights, extra practice time can accommodate: DHS sports practice space without requiring teams to find other practice sites off campus; some home JV football, soccer and lacrosse games can be held at the typical early evening time and not called for darkness or moved to the very large and expensive North DeKalb Stadium. Dunwoody High School will become one of the few –if not only- public high school in DeKalb that has their very own lighted field!

An existing quote for the expense of lighting the field expires at the beginning of September. Currently funds have been raised for all but 25% of the lighting expense equaling $80,000. The timing is not great to ask for money, we all know that back-to-school means all sorts of surprise expenses for families, but I would like to call on the citizens of our great little city to help. If we all give a little, we can collectively raise a lot!

The lighting project potentially benefits every child in the city of Dunwoody. At some point in their life whether they attend Dunwoody High School or not, they could find themselves at an activity on the field. It could be as a DHS fan or athlete playing one of the sports mentioned before, a sports camp, rec team practice, marching band event, or as a fan /member of an opposing team. With lighting, possibilities are open to approved community events when the field is not in use.

According to Wikipedia there are 6000 family dwellings in Dunwoody. If even half of those families were to give a minimum of $30 to the lighting fund, the goal of $80,000 would be easily obtained. If you live in Dunwoody, you have a stake in the high school community; the more desirable our high school is the higher property values will climb!

  • If you are a Dunwoody HS family, please eek $30 out of your budget over the next month and give to this need.
  • If you have pre-school to middle age students that will attend DHS one day, please, invest in the future of the DHS by giving $30.
  • If your child attends private school, if you are an empty nester, or don’t have children please don’t pass on this opportunity to boost your local high school and make it shine…the small investment of $30 could help grow your neighborhood property values.

You can donate by visiting www.GoFundMe.com and search for ‘Dunwoody High Athletic Lighting’. Funds need to be raised by September 5, less than a month.

Thanks much for taking time to listen,

Carol Gaultney