Quality Public Education for All New Jersey Students

 

 
     5-1-12 Department of Education Release explains policy rationals for new rate methodology, federal requirements for revision of gradnuation rates
     4-11,12-12 p.m - Governor's Press Release re Priority, Focus and Rewards Schools Final list...PolitickerNJ and NJ Spotlight articles
     3-30-13 Education in the News - Dept of Education-State Budget, Autism Rates in NJ
     3-20-12 Education Issues in the News
     GSCS State Budget FY 2012-2013 Testimony
     2-29-12 NJTV on NJ School Funding...and, Reporters' Roundtable back on the aire
     2-26-12 State budget, School Elections, and Federal Grant funds for local reform initiatives
     2-24-12 Headlines from around NJ - from Google (hit on nj education-nj budget)
     2-23-12 Education in the News - Education reform noted in state budget message; Facebook grant to Newark teachers
     STATE AID DISTRICT LIST - PROPOSED for FY 2012-2013
     Education Funding Report on School Funding Reform Act (SFRA) issued 2-23-12
     Text of Gov. Christie's State Budget Message, given Feb. 21, 2012
     2-22-12 School Aid in State Budget Message - Is There a Devil in the Details
     2-21-12 State Budget Message for Fiscal Year 2012-2013
     1-24-12 Supreme Court Justices Nominated by Governor Christie
     1-17-12 Breaking News - Governor delivers State of the State Message, Signs 'November Vote' bill, A4394
     List of PRIORITY, FOCUS and REWARDS SCHOOLS per DOE Application on ESEA (NCLB) Waiver
     Education Transformation Task Force Initial Report...45 recommendations for starters
     9-12-11 Governor's Press Notice & Fact Sheet re: Education Transformation Task Force Report
     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)
     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
     4-21-11 Supreme Court hears school funding argument
     4-14-11 Governor Releases Legislation to Address Education Reform Package
     4-13-11 Governor's Proposed Legislation on Education Reform April 2011
     4-5-11 Education Issues in the News
     4-8-11 Education Issues in the News
     4-7-11 Gov. Christie - 'Addressing New Jersey's Most Pressing Education Challenges'
     4-7-11 Early news coverage & press releases - Governor's Brooking Inst. presentation on his education reform agenda
     4-3-11Press of Atlantic City - Pending Supreme Court ruling could boost aid to New Jersey schools
     4-2-11 The Record - Charter school in Hackensack among 58 bids
     4-1-11 N.J. gets 58 charter school applications
     3-30-11 Acting Commr Cerf talks to School Administrators about Gov's Education Reform agenda
     3-26-11 New Jersey’s school-funding battle could use a dose of reality
     Link to Special Master Judge Doyne's Recommendations on School Funding law to the Supreme Court 3-22-11
     3-22-11 Special Master's Report to the Supreme Court: State did not meet its school funding obligation
     GSCS 3-7-11Testimony on State Budget as Proposed by the Governor for FY'12 before the Senate Budget Committee
     3-4-11 'Teacher Evaluation Task Force Files Its Report'
     3-6-11 Poll: Tenure reform being positively received by the public
     Link to Teacher Evaluation Task Force Report
     GSCS Take on Governor's Budget Message
     Gov's Budget Message for Fiscal Year 2010-2011 Today, 2pm
     Tenure Reform - Video patch to Commissioner Cerf's presentation on 2-16-10
     2-16-11 Commissioner Cerf to introduce education reform plans...School construction...Speaker Oliver on vouchers
     2-16-11 Commissioner Cerf talks to educators on Tenure, Merit Pay , related reforms agenda
     9-23-10 Breaking News - Star Ledger ‘Facebook CEO Zuckerberg to donate $100M to Newark schools on Oprah Winfrey Show’
     1-7-11 Opinion: The Record - Doblin: ‘Students are collateral damage in Christie’s war’
     2-7-11Grassroots at Work in the Suburbs
     1-13-11 Supreme Court Appoints Special Master for remand Hearing
     1-20-11 GSCS Testimony before Senator Buono's Education Aid Impact hearing in Edison
     12-16-10 p,m. BREAKINGS NEWS: Christopher Cerf to be named NJ Education Commissioner
     GSCS Board of Trustees endorsed ACTION LETTER to Trenton asking for caution on Charter School expansion
     12-12-10 'Rash of upcoming superintendent retirements raises questions on Gov. Christie's pay cap'
     12-8-10 Education & Related Issues in the News - Tenure Reform, Sup't Salary Caps Reactions, Property Valuations Inflated
     12-7-10 Education Issues continue in the news
     12-6-10 njspotlight.com 'Christie to Name New Education Commissioner by Year End'
     12-5-10 New York Times 'A Bleak Budget Outlook for Public Broadcasters'
     12-5-10 Sunday News - Education-related Issues
     GSCS Education Forum Stayed Focused on Quality Education
     11-19-10 In the News - First Hearing held on Superintendent Salary Caps at Kean University
     11-15-10 GSCS meeting with Assembly Speaker Sheila Oliver
     11-18-10 Superintendent Salary Caps to be publicly discussed tonight at Kean University
     Governor's Toolkit Summary - Updated November 2010
     10-8-10 Education Issue in the News
     9-29-10 Christie Education Reform proposals in The News
     9-15-10 'Governor Christie outlines cuts to N.J. workers' pension, benefits'
     9-1-10 Education in the News
     8-31-10 Latest development: Schunder's margin notes reveal application error
     8-27-10 later morning - breaking news: Statehouse Bureau ‘Gov. Chris Christie fires N.J. schools chief Bret Schundler’
     8-27-10 Star Ledger ‘U.S. officials refute Christie on attempt to fix Race to the Top application during presentation’
     8-25-10 Race to the Top articles - the 'day after' news analysis
     8-24-10 Race to the Top Award Recipients named
     8-23-10 S2208 (Sarlo-Allen prime sponsors) passes 36-0 (4 members 'not voting') in the Senate on 8-23-10
     8-18-10 Property Tax Cap v. Prior Negotiated Agreements a Big Problem for Schools and Communities
     8-16-10 Senate Education hears 'for discussion only' comments re expanding charter school authorization process; Commissioner Schundler relays education priorities to the Committee
     7-22-10 'Summer school falls victim to budget cuts in many suburban towns'
     7-21-10 List of bills in Governor's 'Toolkit'
     Governor's Toolkit bills listing
     7-16-10 GSCS Information & Comments - S29 Property Tax Cap Law and Proposal to Reduce Superintendent salaries ....
     7-15 & 16 -10 'Caps - PLURAL!' in the news
     7-12-10 Assembly passes S29 - the 2% cap bill - 73 to 4, with 3 not voting
     GSCS re:PropertyTax Cap bill - Exemption needed for Special Education enrollment costs
     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
     GSCS On the Scene in Trenton: Cap Proposals, Opportunity Scholarship Act in Limbo
     6-11-10 In the News: State Budget moving ahead on schedule
     6-10-10 Op-Ed in Trenton Times Sunday June 6 2010
     Recently proposed legislation S2043 brings back Last Best Offer (LBO) for school boards in negotiations
     6-8-10 Education issues in the news today - including 'hold' on pension reform, round two
     6-8-10 (posted) Education & Related Issues in the News
     6-4-10 Education News
     6-3-10 RTTT controversy remains top news - articles and editorials, column
     6-2-10 RACE TO THE TOP (RTTT) 'NJ STYLE': It is what it is ...but what exactly is it? Race to the Top application is caught in a crossfire of reports - more information and clarity is needed
     6-2-10 RACE TO THE TOP (RTTT) 'NJ STYLE' :It is what it is ...but what exactly is it? Race to the Top application is caught in a crossfire of reports - more information and clarity is needed.
     GSCS 'QUICK' THOUGHT - Will the Administration's reform legislation being introduced just this month- May - have a fair chance for productive debate and analysis
     5-11-10 njspotlight.com focuses on NJ's plans for and reactions to education reform
     ADMINISTRATION'S PLANS CITED FOR ROUND 2 - RACE TO THE TOP GRANT
     5-8 & 9-10 Education Reform Proposals Annoucned
     5-9-10 'Gov Christie to propose permanent caps on salary raises for public workers'
     5-3-10 Newsflash! Governor Christie makes NJ Supreme Court appointment
     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
     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'
     4-18-10 Sunday Op-eds on school budget vote: Jim O'Neill & Gov Christie
     4-19-10 Lt. Gov. Guadagno's Red Tape Review Group initial Report released
     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'
     4-6-10 'Gov. Chris Chrisite extends dealdine for teacher salary concessions'
     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
     4-1-10 New Initiatives outlined to encourage wage freezes - reaction
     3-29-10 The Record and Asbury Park Press - Editorials
     3-26-10 GSCS: Effective & Well-Reasoned Communication with State Leaders is Critical
     3-23-10 GSCS Testimony presented to Senate Budget Committee on State Budget FY'11
     3-23-10 ' N.J. Gov. Chris Christie signs pension, benefits changes for state employees'
     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
     3-16-10 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 'GOP vows tools to cut expenses, tighter caps'
     3-9-10 'NJ leaders face tough choices on budget'
     3-5-10 HomeTowne Video taping + 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 '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'
     Flyer: March 2 Education Summit Keynote Speaker - Education Commissioner Bret Schundler - Confirmed
     2-25-10 Gov. Christie's Red Tape Review Comm., chaired by Lt. Gov. Guadagno, to hold public hearings In March
     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'
     2-12-10 Assembly Budget hearing posted for this Wednesday, Feb. 17
     FY2010 Budget Solutions - PRESS PACKET
     State Aid Memo (2-11-10) 2 pgs
     2-12-10 News Coverage: Governor Christie's message on actions to address current fiscal year state budget deficits
     2-11-10 Gov Christie address to Joint Session of the Legislature on state budget and current year aid reduction remains scheduled for today
     2-10-10 'Schools are likely targets for NJ budget cuts'
     2-9-10 News article posted this morning notes potential for large loss of current year school aid
     2-8-10 Northjersey.com editorial 'Tightenting our Belts'
     2-8-10'Gov Christie, lawmakers proporse sweeping pension, health care changes for public employees'
     2-2-10 GSCS BOARD TO MEET WITH COMMISSIONER BRET SCHUNDLER TODAY
     1-28-10 School Surplus plan to supplant State Aid in this year gaining probability
     Governor Christie's Education Team Transition Report
     Governor Christie Education Transition Team Report , released 1-22-10
     1-21-10'N.J.'s Christie won't rule out layoffs, furloughs to close unexpected $1.2B deficit'
     1-20-10 Editorials, Commentary on New Governor in Trenton
     1-19-10 Chris Christie - Inauguration Day
     1-18-10 Advance news on 'Christie as new Governor'
     1-14-10 'N.J. Gov.-elect Christie targets teachers' union with Schundler appointment'
     1-14-10 'To lead schools, Christie picks voucher advocate'
     1-13-10 More articles, plus Wikipedia information re New Education Commissioner, Bret Schundler
     1-13-10 Christie Press Conference reports
     1-13-10 Christie's New Commissioner of Education to be announced today - 12:30 Statehouse Press Conference
     1-13-10 New Commissioner of Education to be announced today - 12:30 Statehouse Press Conference
     1-12-10 Moving on...'Budget plan a wrinkle for districts'
     1-11-10 Transition News
     1-7-10 'N.J. Gov-elect Christie blast Democrats for lame-duck actions'
     12-27-09 'New Jersey competes for education reform stimulus money' (aka 'Race to the Top' funds)
     12-23-09 GSCS: Governor Corzine targets excess school surplus to replace state aid payments starting in Feb '10 - lame duck legislation anticipated
     12-15-09 GSCS is working with the Christie Transition Team
     12-12 & 13-09 Education Issues in the News
     12-11-09 'Gov.-elect Chris Christie's team got its signals crossed on education funding application'
     12-9-09 Governor-elect Christie talks more about his thougths for education
     12-5-09 'Once powerful teachers union faces tough times with Christie'
     12-3 Governor-Elect Chris Christie Announces Key Appointments
     12-3-09 'Gov.-elect Christie visits North Brunswick to talk with educators on district challenges'
     (12-8-09) GSCS Board of Trustees representatives to meet with Christie 'Red Tape' Group
     11-23-09 Governor-elect Christie names Transition Team Subcommittee members
     11-13-09 Chrisite's Budget Transition Team Annouced
     11-13-09 Education Week on: Gov-elect Christie's Education Agenda; Race to the Top Funds Rules
     11-12-09 Governor-elect Christie names his 10 member transition team
2-22-10 Trenton Active Today
GSCS: As part of the confirmation process, Acting Commissioner Schundler was interviewed by the Judiciary Committee this morning. Chairman Scutari announced, after approximately 2 hours of questioning, that the committee needed more time and that the hearing would be reconvened this coming Monday, March 1.
Acting Treasurer Eristoff spent over 2 hours before the Assembly Budget Committee in a Q & A session dealing with the Governor's current year decifit plan for state aid cuts and state spending reductions. Among other things, the Treasurer told the committee that the FY10 deficit plan is in place already, and that the administration is now focused on FY11 and the Governor's March 16 Budget Message. Assembly Budget Chairman Lou Greenwald cotinues to press for clarity on what actions, including the surplus reduction proposal, specifically may require legislative action.


Fast Track: Pension reform legislation passed the Senate 36-0 earlier in the afternoon today. The Assembly is introducing that legislation today, setting the stage to vote on it shortly.


Click on more below to see articles: "N.J. Senate panel delays vote on Bret Schundler's nomination for education chief" ... "N.J. acting treasurer, Assembly committee spar over Gov. Chris Christie's budget cuts" ... "N.J. Senate approves sweeping pension changes for public employees" ... "N.J. Senate approves ban on 'diploma mills' for school administrators, teachers to boost salaries"


Below are the pension reform bills that passed today 2-22-10, as well as the employee school tuition approval bill which also passed. Links should take you to the New Jersey Legislature Home Page for bills' details.:

    Monday, February 22, 2010 - 2:00 PM

    Senate Chambers

 

Voting Session:  

    


Bill

Abstract

 

Current Status

LDOA

 


S2

Pub emp pensions-elig, allowance, rights

 

PS

2/22/2010

 

S3

SHBP, SEHBP-elig, cost share, waiver

 

PS

2/22/2010

 

S4

Sick leave, disab. benf.-PERS, TPAF

PS

2/22/2010

 

 

S826

Sch. dist. emp.-concerns tuition assist.

 

PS

2/22/2010

 

________________________________

 

N.J. Senate panel delays vote on Bret Schundler's nomination for education chief

By Jeanette M. Rundquist

February 22, 2010, 5:24PM

.
TRENTON Acting Education Commissioner Bret Schundler was questioned about issues ranging from school funding to his opinion of prayer in school, as the Senate Judiciary Committee began his confirmation hearing today.

 

Schundler, 51, took questions for about an hour and a half about such topics as a potential state aid cut of 15 percent announced last week by Gov. Chris Christie; the benefits of preschool; and sex education.

 

The committee did not vote, however. Over the objections of Republican members, the hearing was adjourned so Democratic lawmakers could attend a caucus meeting. It is set to resume Monday.

 

The Republican former mayor of Jersey City, most recently chief operating officer of the King’s College, a Christian liberal arts school in New York, Schundler repeatedly pushed aside questions about his opinions on issues such as abstinence-only sex education, saying the job is not "about the commissioner using it to advance his preferences."

 

Under questioning by committee chair Sen. Nicholas Scutari (D-Union), Schundler said rather than the commissioner dictating sex ed curriculum, districts should make decisions within state parameters.

 

Pushed again for an opinion, he finally said "I encourage my daughter to abstain from sexual activity." His daughter, 18, and son, 11, attend private school.

 

Schundler also said he doesn’t endorse prayer in school, but felt for many people faith is "that thing that undergirds all we do."

 

"I suspect there are many people of faith in the Legislature," he said.

 

Schundler told the panel he favors "standards-based reform" and "small learning communities" within schools. He and Christie also support school-choice legislation. He said Christie is still considering approaches to cutting state aid.

 

The gallery was full of education advocates. Lynne Strickland, director of the Garden State Coalition of Schools, said she wished the committee had voted today.

 

"We need a Department of Education that can move forward," Strickland said

 

 

N.J. acting treasurer, Assembly committee spar over Gov. Chris Christie's budget cuts

By Lisa Fleisher/Statehouse Bureau

February 22, 2010, 6:22PM

 


TRENTON -- Facing questions on mid-year cuts to the current state budget, Gov. Chris Christie’s acting treasurer today stressed he’s focusing on next year instead.

 

Acting Treasurer Andrew Eristoff told the Assembly Budget Committee it is time to stop picking over funds Christie earlier this month sliced from this year’s budget, known as the Fiscal Year 10 budget because it runs through this June. He said the administration doesn’t have much time to create a plan for the year that runs through June 2011. Christie will deliver his budget address on March 16.

 

“I don’t want to sound absolutist, but the fact is that action was taken, and now we are focused on Fiscal ‘11,” said Eristoff, whose appointment was approved today by the full Seante. “Fiscal ‘10 is over.”



Previous coverage

N.J. Senate committee approves Andrew Eristoff as treasurer

N.J. Democrats question Gov. Christie's treasurer nominee Andrew Eristoff on budget cuts

Gov. Chris Christie says he will need N.J. Legislature to move money into general funds

Full N.J. budget coverage


Democrats, however, questioned the analysis that went into $2.2 billion in mid-year funding cuts to areas such as hospitals, schools and charities.

 

“The impact on people’s lives are worthy of a greater debate,” Assemblyman Louis Greenwald (D-Camden) said after the hearing. “There wasn’t a lot of depth put in to the look at the cuts and how far that ripple effect went.”

 

Several Democrats on the committee said the administration did not think hard enough about the “ripple effects” of the budget cuts, such as jobs lost and federal matching funds sacrificed.
Eristoff said the cuts had to be made quickly because the administration was dealing with a “gathering financial storm” and could not launch a full-blown budget process.

 

Greenwald said lawmakers could have given input to save jobs. “I’m not asking for a full-blown budget process,” he said. “Just pick up the phone and call me.”

Christie made many cuts, and sliced $475 million from local school district aid, equal to an amount the schools had above a 2 percent surplus level. Critics say the cuts punish schools that were prudent. Democrats argue the state should have cut into its own $500 million surplus instead. Republicans counter that schools still have a 2 percent cushion, while the state surplus is less than 2 percent of the current $29 billion budget.

N.J. Senate approves sweeping pension changes for public employees

By Lisa Fleisher/Statehouse Bureau

February 22, 2010, 3:16PM

With hundreds of union workers looking on from the gallery and waiting in the hallway, the Senate this afternoon easily passed three bills that made sweeping changes to public employee pensions.

The bills passed 36-0, with four senators not voting. The Assembly is expected to introduce its versions of the bills on Thursday.

 

The one bill not voted on would have put a constitutional amendment on the ballot in November asking voters to require the state to contribute money to the pension fund. The Senate is expected to hold a required public hearing on the amendment Monday and can bring the amendment up for a vote 20 days after that.

State and local workers in the state system -- about 700,000 in all -- said New Jersey's politicians have put the $68 billion pension fund in peril by not contributing their fair share.

But legislators see it differently.

 

"We're here trying to save this pension system. We're not trying to rob it," said Sen. Jim Whelan (D-Atlantic), said last week when the State Government Committee he chairs approved the bills for release to the full house. "We're trying to save it for future generations."

 

All four bills have at least 23 Senate sponsors, more than the 21 required for passage. Senators from both parties who cleared the package last week stressed urgency in fixing the struggling retirement funds.

"We have to get something done. We can't spend six months, a year, the next 18 months arguing about a perfect pension reform bill," Whelan said last week.

 

Public workers and their unions said changes in benefits should be made at the bargaining table and they are being treated as scapegoats. A police union official ripped up a letter Gov. Chris Christie wrote during his gubernatorial campaign that called pensions a "sacred trust."

"We don't ask the public to absorb 1 percent of the smoke we inhale," said Bill Lavin, an Elizabeth firefighter and union official. "We don't feel that we therefore should have to share in the very medical attention to keep us safe and put us back on the job."

 

Christie has said the bills would not "do harm to the future benefits of police and firemen. But everybody needs to step up to the plate and contribute."

 

The pension system was underfunded by about $34 billion as of the last official accounting.

The bills would require workers and retirees to contribute to their own health care costs, ban part-time workers from the pension system, cap sick-leave payouts, trim the size of pensions and constitutionally require the state to fully fund its pension obligations. Most changes would apply to future workers, but current employees would contribute to their health care costs.

Staff writer Claire Heininger contributed to this report

 

 

N.J. Senate approves ban on 'diploma mills' for school administrators, teachers to boost salaries

By Peggy Ackermann/Statehouse Bureau

February 22, 2010, 6:41PM

The state Senate today voted 38-0 to approve a bill that cracks down on the use of “diploma mills” — unaccredited institutions of higher learning — by school administrators and teachers who obtain advanced degrees and then are able to boost their salaries.

 

Under the bill sponsored by Sen. Richard Codey (D-Essex) and Sen. Jennifer Beck (R-Monmouth), those seeking tuition assistance or higher pay must earn their advanced degrees or additional credits from authorized institutions of higher education.

 

They also must receive approval from their school superintendents before enrolling in the courses for which they will seek tuition reimbursement.

 

School superintendents must have approval from their school boards.

 

Courses and degrees have to be related to employees’ current or future jobs, and the bill allows school boards to adopt more stringent requirements than those in the bill.

 

Administrators and teachers who are denied can appeal those decisions to their school boards.

The bill now goes to the full Assembly for a vote.

If approved and signed by Gov. Chris Christie, it would take effect on July 1 of the school year following the date of enactment.