Quality Public Education for All New Jersey Students

 

 
     7-14-11 State GUIDANCE re: Using Additional State Aid as Property Tax Relief in this FY'12 Budget year.PDF
     7-14-11 DOE Guidance on Local Options for using Additional State School Aid in FY'12 State Budget.PDF
     FY'12 State School Aid District-by-District Listing, per Appropriations Act, released 110711
     7-12-11 pm District by District Listing of State Aid for FY'12 - Guidelines to be released later this week (xls)
     Democrat Budget Proposal per S4000, for Fiscal Year 2011-2012
     Additional School Aid [if the school funding formula,SFRA, were fully funded for all districts] per Millionaires' Tax bill S2969
     6-24-11 Democrat Budget Proposal brings aid to all districts
     6-1-11 Supreme Court Justice nominee, Anne Paterson, passed muster with Senate Judiciary Committee yesterday by 11-1 margin
     4-26-11 School Elections, Randi Weingarten in NJ, Special Educ Aid, Shared Services bill
     4-25-11 Charter Schools in Suburbia: More Argument than Agreement
     4-24-11 Major Education Issues in the News
     4-3-11Press of Atlantic City - Pending Supreme Court ruling could boost aid to New Jersey schools
     3-31-11 Charters an Issue in the Suburbs - and - So far, only 7 Separate Questions on April School Budget Ballots
     3-26-11 New Jersey’s school-funding battle could use a dose of reality
     3-25-11 Education Week on School Cutbacks Around The Nation
     Link to Special Master Judge Doyne's Recommendations on School Funding law to the Supreme Court 3-22-11
     GSCS 3-7-11Testimony on State Budget as Proposed by the Governor for FY'12 before the Senate Budget Committee
     Attached to GSCS 3-7-11 Testimony: Marlboro Schools strike historic agreement with instructional aides, bus drivers, bus aides
     GSCS - Local District Listing : Local Funds Transferred to Charter Schools 2001-2010
     GSCS Bar Chart: Statewide Special Education cost percent compared to Regular & Other Instructional cost percent 2004-2011
     GSCS Bar Chart: 2001to 2011 Statewide General Fund Transfers Required from Local District Budgets to Support Charter Schools (Increased from $85M to $317M)
     GSCS Take on Governor's Budget Message
     Gov's Budget Message for Fiscal Year 2010-2011 Today, 2pm
     8-18-10 Property Tax Cap v. Prior Negotiated Agreements a Big Problem for Schools and Communities
     7-22-10 'Summer school falls victim to budget cuts in many suburban towns'
     7-12-10 Assembly passes S29 - the 2% cap bill - 73 to 4, with 3 not voting
     7-8-10 Tax Caps, Education in the News
     GSCS:Tax Cap Exemption needed for Special Education Costs
     7-3-10 Governor Christie and Legislative leaders reached agreement today on a 2% property tax cap with 4 major exemptions
     7-1 and 2- 10 Governor Christie convened the Legislature to address property tax reform
     6-29-10 GSCS - The question remains: ? Whither property Tax Reform
     GSCS On the Scene in Trenton: State Budget poised to pass late Monday...Cap Proposals, Opportunity Scholarship Act in Limbo
     6-28-10 State Budget tops the news today
     GSCS On the Scene in Trenton: Cap Proposals, Opportunity Scholarship Act in Limbo
     6-25-10 Appropriations Act bills for Fiscal Year 2010-2011 available on NJ Legislature website - here are the links
     6-23-10 Trenton News: State Budget on the move...Education Issues
     6-22-10 The Appropriations Act for the State Budget Fiscal Year 2010-2011
     6-22-10 Budget , Cap Proposals & Education News - njspotlight.com
     6-11-10 In the News: State Budget moving ahead on schedule
     6-10-10 Op-Ed in Trenton Times Sunday June 6 2010
     6-8-10 (posted) Education & Related Issues in the News
     Office on Legislative Services Analysis of Department of Educaiton - State Budget for FY'11
     4-23-10 Education issues remain headline news
     4-22-10 School Elections - in the News Today
     4-21-10 DOE posts election results
     Hear about Governor Christie's noontime press conference tonight
     4-21-10 News on School Election Results
     4-21-10 Assoc. Press 'NJ voters reject majority of school budgets'
     4-20-10 Today is School Budget & School Board Member Election Day
     4-18-10 It's About Values - Quality Schools...Your Homes...Your Towns: Sunday front page story and editorial
     4-19-10 GSCS Testimony before the Assembly Budget Committee on State Budget FY'11
     4-13-10 Testimony submitted to Senate Budget Committee
     4-13-10 Commissioner Schundler before Senate Budget Committee - early reports....progress on budget election issue
     4-12-10 'Gov. urges voters to reject school districts' budgets without wage freezes for teachers'
     GSCS 'HOW-TO' GET TRENTON'S ATTENTION ON STATE BUDGET SCHOOL ISSUES FY '11' - Effective and Well-Reasoned Communication with State Leaders is Critical
     4-6-10 'Gov. Chris Chrisite extends dealdine for teacher salary concessions'
     4-6-10 'NJ school layoffs, program cuts boost attention to Apri 20 votes
     4-2-10 Press of Atlantic City lists county impact re: school aid reduction
     4-2-10 'On Titanic, NJEA isn't King of the World'
     Administration's presentation on education school aid in its 'Budget in Brief' published with Governor Christie's Budget Message
     PARENTS ARE CALLING TO EXPRESS THEIR CONCERNS FOR THE SCHOOL AID PICTURE - GSCS WILL KEEP YOU UP-TO-DATE
     4-1-10 Courier Post article reports on Burlington and Camden County district budgets
     4-1-10 Education in the News today
     4-1-10 New Initiatives outlined to encourage wage freezes - reaction
     3-31-10 What's Going on in Local Districts?
     3-29-10 The Record and Asbury Park Press - Editorials
     3-26-10 GSCS: Effective & Well-Reasoned Communication with State Leaders is Critical
     FAQ's on Pension Reform bills signed into law March 22, 2010
     3-26-10 School Aid, Budget Shortfall - Impt Related Issues - Front Page News
     3-25-10 STATE BUDGET FY11 PROCESS - IMPORTANT TRENTON DATES - April through May 2010
     3-23-10 GSCS Testimony presented to Senate Budget Committee on State Budget FY'11
     GSCS - Formula Aid Loss and Percent Loss by District - Statewide
     GSCS - Formula Aid Loss under 50%, by County
     GSCS - Formula Aid Loss of 50% or more, by County
     3-23-10 ' N.J. Gov. Chris Christie signs pension, benefits changes for state employees'
     3-23-10 State Budget Issues in the News
     3-21-10 Reform bills up for a vote in the Assembly on Monday, March 22
     GSCS FYI - GSCS will be testifying onTuesday in Bergen County on the State Budget
     3-21-10 Sunday News from Around the State - School Communities, School Budgets and State Budget Issues
     3-17-10 Budget News - Gov. Chris Christie proposes sacrifices
     3-17-10 Budget News - NJ Schools Stunned By Cuts
     3-16-10 Link to Budget in Brief publication
     3-15-10mid-day: 'Gov. Christie plans to cut NJ school aid by $800M'
     3-14-10 'Christie will propose constitutional amendment to cap tax hikes in N.J. budget'
     3-15-10 'N.J. taxpayers owe pension fund $45.8 billion' The Record
     3-11-10 Public Hearings on State Budget for FY11 posted on NJ Legislature website
     3-11-10 'GOP vows tools to cut expenses, tighter caps'
     3-9-10 'NJ leaders face tough choices on budget'
     Flyer: March 2 Education Summit Keynote Speaker - Education Commissioner Bret Schundler - Confirmed
     3-5-10 HomeTowne Video taping plus interviews of GSCS Summit@Summit
     3-5-10 GSCS Summit@Summit with Bret Schundler to be lead topic on Hall Institute's weekly 2:30 pm podcast today
     3-4-10 GSCS Email-Net: Summit @ Summit Report - A New Day in Trenton?
     3-4-10 'NJ education chief Bret Schundler tells suburban schools to expect more cuts in aid'
     3-4-10 'School aid cuts unavoidable during NJ budget crisis'
     3-3-10 'Public Education in N.J.: Acting NJ Comm of Educ Bret Schundler says 'Opportunity'
     2-24-10 'Tight funds raise class sizes that districts long sought to cut'
     2-22-10 Christie and unions poised to do batttle over budget cuts'
     2-22-10 Trenton Active Today
     2-19-10 'Acting NJ education commissioner hoping other savings can ward off cuts'
     Flyer for March 2 Education 'Summit@Summit'
     2-16-10 'Christie Adopts Corzine Cuts, Then Some'
     2-14-10 'FAQ's on NJ's state of fiscal emergency declaration by Gov. Christie'
     State Aid 2010 Reserve Calculation and Appeal Procedures
     2-12-10 News Coverage: Governor Christie's message on actions to address current fiscal year state budget deficits
     FY2010 Budget Solutions - PRESS PACKET
     School Aid Withheld Spreadsheet
4-23-10 Education issues remain headline news
‘School Budget Woes’ by Michael P. Riccards, Executive Director, The Hall Institute

'Christie says voters against school budgets are for him' Associated Press


'N.J. towns, schools are urged to consult unions on failed budget reviews' Star Ledger


EDUCATION » Topics » Education

 

‘School Budget Woes’ Written by Michael P. Riccards, Executive Director, The Hall Institute

Thursday, 22 April 2010 15:21

Rarely do people vote in school budget elections.  We don’t know what the numbers mean in terms of our property assessment, and we don’t know the school board candidates.  Yet this election, nearly double the number of citizens voted, and in 59% of the districts the allocations were turned down—the toughest verdicts in a generation.  Incumbents on the school board were often defeated, unheard of in this state.  The people who vote in these low visibility election are usually the teachers, their families, and people with young kids in the schools.  When on Election Day 2010, I voted in Hamilton (Mercer) and I was surprised about the large number of older people voting.  That signaled trouble, and indeed it did as the budget fell by almost a two to one margin.

I asked my neighbors how they were going to vote, and uniformly they were negative.  Some are fed up with the retiring superintendent who, critics say, has an indecent number of relatives and friends on the township school payroll.  One of the candidates for the school board actually took out a full page ad in the newspaper denouncing him.  Property taxes are just too high, and even in a town with large numbers of active state employees and retired state employees, citizens are feeling the strains of budgets that do not acknowledge the realities out there.  Once again, the teachers got their 4%, and the local union leader in Hamilton arrogantly scoffed at Governor Christie’s proposal for restraint.

 

Clearly, the repudiation of school budgets across the state, especially in working class areas, reflect sympathy with the governor in his war with the NJEA.  Even the Democratic politicians are relegated to taking potshots at Christie, but they have few alternatives except soak the rich.  The difficulty they must admit is that all the gimmicks Trenton lawmakers have used over the decades are no longer available.  The time for reckoning has come.


I was surprised how in my town, the quality of people running for the board was frankly so low.  Even one candidate acknowledged it; he was the angry bearded man who said he thought block scheduling was about construction of buildings.  Another candidate was an old teacher who insisted on taking us down memory lane.  Other candidates did not understand either No Child Left Behind or Obama’s changes.  One candidate could barely talk, and another insisted that he knew more than the trained counselor about whether his kid was autistic.  Imagine being a superintendent and dealing with those guys!

 

One of the problems is that to save money, one must really re-think from the bottom up the whole array of services we offer.  Let me propose some heretical notions: 

Do we really need high school athletics?  Let them be run by community clubs.

Do we really need to bus older kids?  Let their parents be responsible for getting them there and then home.

Do we need to fund special education at the very high levels we do?

Isn’t it time to end the Abbott and class based alternatives to funding, and simply set a level that is acceptable for a thorough and efficient education?

Why do so many of our kids not meet national standards, let alone international standards?  And let us stop saying that New Jersey schools are the best in the republic.  They are not.  Massachusetts schools are, so let us adopt their content standards.

Let us offer parents charter schools and voucher alternatives, but let us be honest with parents and tell them the research does NOT show they are any better than public schools.

Give teachers merit pay that is significant (not $300 or so) and establish some accountability to get rid of those teachers who cannot teach.

It is time for all of us to start selling education and the American dream, and we can best start by holding families, kids, and teachers accountable.

Michael P. Riccards is Executive Director of the Hall Institute of Public Policy - New Jersey.

Listen to a podcast on NJ School Board Elections

 

EDUCATION » Topics » Education

 

School Budget Woes

 

Written by Michael P. Riccards   

Thursday, 22 April 2010 15:21

Rarely do people vote in school budget elections.  We don’t know what the numbers mean in terms of our property assessment, and we don’t know the school board candidates.  Yet this election, nearly double the number of citizens voted, and in 59% of the districts the allocations were turned down—the toughest verdicts in a generation.  Incumbents on the school board were often defeated, unheard of in this state.  The people who vote in these low visibility election are usually the teachers, their families, and people with young kids in the schools.  When on Election Day 2010, I voted in Hamilton (Mercer) and I was surprised about the large number of older people voting.  That signaled trouble, and indeed it did as the budget fell by almost a two to one margin.

I asked my neighbors how they were going to vote, and uniformly they were negative.  Some are fed up with the retiring superintendent who, critics say, has an indecent number of relatives and friends on the township school payroll.  One of the candidates for the school board actually took out a full page ad in the newspaper denouncing him.  Property taxes are just too high, and even in a town with large numbers of active state employees and retired state employees, citizens are feeling the strains of budgets that do not acknowledge the realities out there.  Once again, the teachers got their 4%, and the local union leader in Hamilton arrogantly scoffed at Governor Christie’s proposal for restraint.

 

Clearly, the repudiation of school budgets across the state, especially in working class areas, reflect sympathy with the governor in his war with the NJEA.  Even the Democratic politicians are relegated to taking potshots at Christie, but they have few alternatives except soak the rich.  The difficulty they must admit is that all the gimmicks Trenton lawmakers have used over the decades are no longer available.  The time for reckoning has come.


I was surprised how in my town, the quality of people running for the board was frankly so low.  Even one candidate acknowledged it; he was the angry bearded man who said he thought block scheduling was about construction of buildings.  Another candidate was an old teacher who insisted on taking us down memory lane.  Other candidates did not understand either No Child Left Behind or Obama’s changes.  One candidate could barely talk, and another insisted that he knew more than the trained counselor about whether his kid was autistic.  Imagine being a superintendent and dealing with those guys!

 

One of the problems is that to save money, one must really re-think from the bottom up the whole array of services we offer.  Let me propose some heretical notions: 

Do we really need high school athletics?  Let them be run by community clubs.

Do we really need to bus older kids?  Let their parents be responsible for getting them there and then home.

Do we need to fund special education at the very high levels we do?

Isn’t it time to end the Abbott and class based alternatives to funding, and simply set a level that is acceptable for a thorough and efficient education?

Why do so many of our kids not meet national standards, let alone international standards?  And let us stop saying that New Jersey schools are the best in the republic.  They are not.  Massachusetts schools are, so let us adopt their content standards.

Let us offer parents charter schools and voucher alternatives, but let us be honest with parents and tell them the research does NOT show they are any better than public schools.

Give teachers merit pay that is significant (not $300 or so) and establish some accountability to get rid of those teachers who cannot teach.

It is time for all of us to start selling education and the American dream, and we can best start by holding families, kids, and teachers accountable.

Michael P. Riccards is Executive Director of the Hall Institute of Public Policy - New Jersey.
Listen to a podcast on NJ School Board Elections

 

Christie says voters against school budgets are for him

By GEOFF MULVIHILL

Associated Press

The state pastime in New Jersey may be complaining about the state's highest-in-the-nation property taxes, but it's rare for voters to stand up against them.

That changed this week.

Urged on by first-year Republican Gov. Chris Christie as he tries to cut spending at all levels of government, voters rejected 59 percent of school budget proposals in local elections on Tuesday, sending them to municipal governing bodies for cuts. It was the first time in 34 years that the majority of budget proposals has been nixed.

In New Jersey, where the schools are considered among the nation's best - and most expensive - the public seemed to validate that they, too, should share in the sacrifice.

While the results were close in many of the 537 school districts where budgets were on the ballot, they were strong enough for Christie to declare victory.

"Voters are saying they can no longer afford a government that wishes problems away," he said yesterday. "We need to heed the direction the public is asking us to go in."

But to many educators and parents, Christie is cast even more now as an education-cutting villain.

Last month, he proposed cutting the state and federal allocation to schools by 11 percent in the fiscal year that begins July 1. Districts responded by crafting budgets calling for both tax increases and layoffs.

Then, Christie called for teachers to take voluntary pay freezes and begin paying part of their health-insurance premiums, saying no layoffs would be necessary if they did. Next, he went further, imploring voters to reject budgets in districts where teachers didn't make concessions.

Teachers in only 20 districts have agreed to pay freezes or reductions.

The dispute got ugly. On an anti-Christie Facebook page with nearly 70,000 followers, one educator compared Christie to former Cambodian dictator Pol Pot. Christie accused schools that sent home election information with students as using them like "drug mules," although the New Jersey Education Association says the material in question wasn't advocating voting any specific way.

The teachers unions and the New Jersey Education Association both said the election results did not just reflect people siding with the governor over teachers.

"This was definitely a referendum on Gov. Christie," said NJEA spokesman Steve Wollmer, who says Christie has tried to vilify the union and teachers. "But it was on his decision to force property taxes higher" by reducing state and federal education aid to public schools.

Montclair State University political scientist Brigid Harrison, however, sees the governor's interpretation as right: "When the governor goes out and urges people to reject school budgets, and they do that," she said, "you have to chalk this one up as a win for the governor."

A group of retirees who gather every morning for coffee at the Cherry Hill Mall's food court all opposed the budget proposals in their districts.

They see schools as having too many administrators and have problems with their own finances: Medicare copays are rising, for instance, while Social Security checks aren't.

"We don't have the money," said Tony Alongi, 87, of Cherry Hill. "I was brought up that you don't buy things unless you have money."

N.J. towns, schools are urged to consult unions on failed budget reviews

By Victoria St. Martin/The Star-Ledger

April 22, 2010, 7:45PM


After a record number of school budgets in New Jersey were voted down on Tuesday, it’s now up to local governing bodies to decide whether to sharpen their financial axes.

For some government officials across the Garden State, where 58 percent of the school spending plans failed at the polls, today was the first lesson in the process.

Education Commissioner Bret Schundler encouraged government officials, who will determine local tax levies after reviewing the defeated spending plans, to reach out to union leadership during the process.

 

"In a negotiation between a union and a school board, they are the counter parties to the discussion," Schundler said during a conference call with municipal and school officials. Schundler said there are times when a third party, such as a town council, can help two parties look at another side.

Schundler, who said at times an opinion from a third party helps him and his wife come to an agreement, invited officials to look at opening contracts.

 

About 600 government and school officials tuned into Schundler and other panelists on a conference call where experts outlined the next steps for municipalities to take with their failed budgets.

Council members in the districts where 316 budgets failed have a month to review the spending plans and to decide what changes, if any, should be made, said officials from the New Jersey School Board Association and the state League of Municipalities, which sponsored the call.

Schundler encouraged government officials, who will determine local tax levies after reviewing the defeated spending plans, to reach out to union leadershipThe need for the teleconference was obvious, participants said.

 

Michael Kaelber, the call’s moderator and director of legal and policy services for school boards association, said that since the election, he keeps hearing people say: "We’ve never seen this before." Tuesday’s results were the highest failure rate since the association began keeping track in 1976.

 

School board officials have until April 28 to send their defeated budgets to the local governing bodies. From there, the process calls for a series of meetings between school and government officials where they review the school district’s budget presentation.

 

If representatives from both the school district and the government meet as committees instead of large groups, the meetings do not have to be open to the public. Panelists said the municipalities could hold all of the meetings publicly or choose to hold one public meeting after several committee meetings.

 

Woodbridge Council President Jim Major, who said the council most recently reviewed a defeated school budget in 2002, said he expects to hear from members of the public during the public comment portion of the upcoming council meetings. He said depending on how much feedback they hear, council members will either continue to gather comments about the school budgets at council meetings or they will hold a special public meeting before making a decision.

Previous coverage:

Gov. Chris Christie says N.J. school budget defeats should serve as 'wake up call'

Two Essex County school election races hang on provisional ballots

N.J. public school breakfast, private school lunch subsidies to be cut

Gov. Chris Christie says school budget election results are proof that N.J. voters want change

Majority of N.J. school budgets rejected for the first time since 1976

N.J. voters reject school budgets in heated elections

N.J. school elections Q&A: What happens when school budgets fail

Governing bodies must make a decision by May 19.

 

"It’s an awesome task and one that none of us take lightly," said Major. "It's serious and the voters have spoken. We need to make sure their voice was heard and we need to make sure the whole process is fair and that it's not emotional."

 

For Kinnelon Councilman Steve Cobell, this will be the third time in several years he has had to review a defeated school budget. One year, the council slashed about $800,000 from the school spending plan. A few years ago, the council did not make any cuts.

 

He predicted this year the council would look to make some reductions in the $31.7 million school budget.

"People don't want programs cut, but there's taxpayers that don't want a 3.3 tax increase on the school budget side," Cobell said. "We’re going to try to work with the school board to see if there are any cuts we can make without affecting programs."

 

Fanwood Mayor Colleen Mahr said the borough’s finance department plans to review the Scotch Plains-Fanwood Board of Education’s budget.

"It costs money for us to do that," Mahr said of hiring an auditor, "and we are very bare-bones at this point."

Staff writer Kristen Alloway contributed to this report