Quality Public Education for All New Jersey Students

 

 
     3-20-12 Education Issues in the News
     4-29-11 BOOMERANG! Near 80 per cent of School Budgets Passed in Wednesday'sSchool Elections
     4-26-11 School Elections, Randi Weingarten in NJ, Special Educ Aid, Shared Services bill
     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
     3-31-11 Charters an Issue in the Suburbs - and - So far, only 7 Separate Questions on April School Budget Ballots
     3-22-11 Special Master's Report to the Supreme Court: State did not meet its school funding obligation
     Attached to GSCS 3-7-11 Testimony: Marlboro Schools strike historic agreement with instructional aides, bus drivers, bus aides
     GSCS Take on Governor's Budget Message
     Gov's Budget Message for Fiscal Year 2010-2011 Today, 2pm
     2-16-11 Commissioner Cerf talks to educators on Tenure, Merit Pay , related reforms agenda
     GSCS FYI
     2-7-11Grassroots at Work in the Suburbs
     1-25-11 Education in the News
     1-24-11 GSCSS Testimony before Assembly Education Committee: Charter School Reform
     Public Hearing on the Impact of Education Aid Cuts, Thursday January 20
     1-20-11 GSCS Testimony before Senator Buono's Education Aid Impact hearing in Edison
     Assembly Education Hearing on Charter School Reform Monday, 1-24-11, 1 pm
     GSCS Board of Trustees endorsed ACTION LETTER to Trenton asking for caution on Charter School expansion
     GSCS testimony on Tenure Reform - Senate Education Committee 12-09-10
     12-7-10 Education Issues continue in the news
     12-5-10 New York Times 'A Bleak Budget Outlook for Public Broadcasters'
     12-5-10 Sunday News - Education-related Issues
     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
     GSCS Education Forum Stayed Focused on Quality Education
     Nov 10 Program Announcement - GSCS & NJSDC Fall Education Forum
     Mark Your Calendars: GSCS-NJ Schools Development Council: Education Forum November 10, 2010 Douglas College Center
     8-23-10 S2208 (Sarlo-Allen prime sponsors) passes 36-0 (4 members 'not voting') in the Senate on 8-23-10
     8-13-10 East Brunswick Public School seeks stay on Hatikvah Charter School opening this fall (re: Hatikvah not meeting minimum enrollment requirement)
     7-22-10 'Summer school falls victim to budget cuts in many suburban towns'
     7-18-10 Troublesome sign of the times? Read article on the growing trend for education foundations - the pressure to provide what the state no longer supports for education...California's Proposition 13 cited
     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
     GSCS - High costs of Special Education must be addressed asap, & appropriately
     7-1 and 2- 10 Governor Christie convened the Legislature to address property tax reform
     GSCS On the Scene in Trenton: State Budget poised to pass late Monday...Cap Proposals, Opportunity Scholarship Act in Limbo
     4-21-10 DOE posts election results
     Hear about Governor Christie's noontime press conference tonight
     4-21-10 News on School Election Results
     4-20-10 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
     4-18-10 Sunday Op-eds on school budget vote: Jim O'Neill & Gov Christie
     4-13-10 Testimony submitted to Senate Budget Committee
     GSCS 'HOW-TO' GET TRENTON'S ATTENTION ON STATE BUDGET SCHOOL ISSUES FY '11' - Effective and Well-Reasoned Communication with State Leaders is Critical
     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
     GSCS 'HOW-TO GET TRENTON'S ATTENTION ON STATE BUDGET SCHOOL ISSUES FY '11': Effective & Well-Reasoned Communication with State Leaders is Critical
     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 GSCS Email-Net: Summit @ Summit Report - A New Day in Trenton?
     3-3-10 'Public Education in N.J.: Acting NJ Comm of Educ Bret Schundler says 'Opportunity'
     3-4-10 'NJ education chief Bret Schundler tells suburban schools to expect more cuts in aid'
     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
     Flyer: March 2 Education Summit Keynote Speaker Confirmed
     Flyer for March 2 Education 'Summit@Summit'
     GSCS at TRI-DISTRICT MEETING IN MONMOUTH COUNTY January 27
     GSCS Report on its Annual Meeting June 2009
     6-23-09 Grassroots at Work re A4140, A4142 and A1489
     6-26-09 Executive Director to GSCS Trustees; Wrap Up Report - State Budget and Assembly bills this week
     5-27-09 GSCS 18th ANNUAL MEETING - All INVITED GUESTS HAVE CONFIRMED, INCLUDING GOVERNOR CORZINE
     4-17-09 Model letter to community re required language on budget election ballot
     FIND OUT & STAY TUNED - www.gscschools.org has nearly 1,000,000 verified hits and approximately 90,000 individual visits to date ... and counting
     3-27-09 GSCS Travels the State
     March 25 GSCS-HADDONFIELD OPEN MEETING 7pm
     Haddonfield On Line posts Commissioner Davy's appearance with GSCS at Wednesday March 25 meeting hosted by Haddonfield School District Board of Education
     GSCS-Leonia 3-18-09 meeting Press Release
     March 25-GSCS-HADDONFIELD GENERAL MEMBERSHIP-OPEN MEETING 7pm
     RESCHEDULED to MARCH 18 - GSCS MEETING IN LEONIA
     CONCERNED ABOUT YOUR SCHOOLS? YOU ARE INVITED-GSCS General Membership Open Meeting Leonia Feb 25 7 pm
     SAVE THE DATE - GSCS GENERAL MEMBERSHIP MEETING IN BERGEN COUNTY
     More good examples - Grassroots advocacy: letters- to-the-editor published
     11-6-07 GSCS Parent Advocates help clarify election issues...the Millburn Example
     10-23 Media reports & Trenton responses to date re GSCS Press Conf
     GSCS 'NOV 6th LEGISLATIVE ELECTIONS 'ADVOCACY PACKET
     7-10-07 EMAILNET GSCS ADVOCACY PACKET Need for new school funding formula, more
     2-20-07 FAIR HAVEN SCHOOL FUNDING & PROPERTY TAX FORUM
     3-15-07 Millburn-Short Hills Advocates for Education ask for you help in contacting Governor
     Grassroots Forum set for 3-8 in Millburn-Short Hills
     GRASSROOTS SPEAK UP re State Aid for FY07-08 & Recent Legislation that can negatively impact school communities
     11-2-06 GSCS Parent Press Conference Coverage
     11-1-06 Press Conference packet
     10-31-06 PRESS ADVISORY
     DIRECTIONS to Statehouse
     SPECIAL SESSION ADVOCACY TIPS
     Parent & Member Information Packet on Special Session
     October 2006 Quality Education At Risk
     7-18-06 Summit PTO-PTA communication
     7-17-06 Bernards Twp communication to citizens
     Contact info for Letters to the Editor - Statewide newspapers
     6-22-06 GSCS Parent Coordinator Letter to the Editor
     NEW to our website...WHAT'S THE 'BUZZ' ?
     4-24-06 Citizens for Hopewell Valley Schools letter to Senator Shirley Turner
     4-16 Courier Post 'Do Nothing Leaders'
     Grassroots at work - Ridgewood Board member testimony of FY07
     3-24-06 Schools learn who wins, loses in Corzine budget
     3-9-06 Governor speaks to S1701 at town meeting
     EMAILNET 3-9-06 to South Jersey districts
     COFFEE a coalition of families for excellent education
     1-29-06 Asbury Park Press Sunday Front Page Right
     Posted 1-17-06 December 2005 article from the NewsTranscript of Monmouth County
     12-16-05 EMAILNET
     1-17-06 Asbury Park Press "Viewpoint" comments by parents Kim Newsome & Marianne Kligman
     1-12-06 Asbury Park Press letter to the editor
     12-12-05 EMAILNET Bills move out of Assembly Education Committee
     Nora Radest Summit Parent, Glen Ridge Supt. Dan Fishbien, Glen Ridge Parenet and Board of Education President Betsy Ginsburg
     UPDATE on 12-8-05 Assembly Education Committee hearing
     12-2-05 Hopewell Valley letter to Senate Education Committee Chair Shirley Turner re: school budget amendment bills & S1701
     Madison parents and Morris County Outreach Efforts on S1701 Amendment legislation 11-28-05
     Parent Network FYI re EMAILNET 11-28-05 on S1701
     10-14-05 EMAILNET Parent question for Gubernatorial Candidates aired on 101.5 debate, SCC funds, Next Board meeting, press briefing notes
     Readington Forum on School Funding & Meet the Assembly Candidates 11-1-05
     Bergen County's 'Dollars & Sense' organization hosts informational meeting on
     Bergen County's 'Dollars & Sense' organization hosts informational meeting on "Bergen County United" Wed. Oct 19th Paramus High School Cafe 7:30 p.m.
     Parents in Trenton 9-21-05 Press Conference
     Annual Meeting President Walt Mahler's Good News on NJ Public Schools
     Glen Ridge community group 'New Jersey Citizens for Education Equity in Funding'
     Glen Ridge Schools and GSCS Dec 9 Meeting
     Red Bank Area December 6, 2004 Forum
     Rumson PTA, Monmouth Parents, May 2005
     Princeton Marh 2005 Education symposium
     Grassroots 'faces'
     Regional Forums: Quality Education Counts - School Funding Reality and S1701
     A99 and S1701
     GSCS Web Servey Results
4-29-11 BOOMERANG! Near 80 per cent of School Budgets Passed in Wednesday'sSchool Elections
Press of Atlantic City - Some school budgets defeated in Wednesday's vote had no tax hikes

Njspotlight.com - Garden State Voters Approve 80 Percent of School Budgets...Light voter turnout revives various plans to move school elections to a more auspicious date

Star Ledger - Nearly 80 percent of N.J. school budgets pass, representing highest rate in a decade

Press of Atlantic City - Some school budgets defeated in Wednesday's vote had no tax hikes

By Diane D’Amico Posted: Thursday, April 28, 2011 10:54 pm | Updated: 10:59 pm, Thu Apr 28, 2011.

Some school budgets defeated in Wednesday's vote had no tax hikes By DIANE D'AMICO Education Writer pressofAtlanticCity.com | 0 comments

Officials in districts with school budgets that were defeated in Wednesday's elections are hoping to convince their local municipal officials to not make additional staff and program cuts, especially in districts where the budget contained no property-tax increase.

"I'm going to wait to see what they want," said Greater Egg Harbor Regional Superintendent Steven Ciccariello, whose budget was voted down by voters in all four sending districts - Galloway Township, Hamilton Township, Egg Harbor City and Mullica Township. Only Mullica voters approved their own local K-8 school budget, leaving officials in the other three municipalities with two defeated school budgets to review.

Results are still not official, and at least one school budget, in Egg Harbor Town-ship, appears to have been rescued from defeat by the results of absentee ballots still being counted Thursday. County clerks must certify the final results before they are released, and tallies in a few local school budget and school board races were so close that absentee ballots could change the results.

State law requires that defeated school budgets be reviewed by municipal governing bodies, whose members can ask for additional cuts. The municipal body can also approve the defeated budget as is. In two districts with defeated budgets, Wildwood and Hamilton Township, the school portion of the local property-tax levy is already at the minimum allowed by the state, so no additional cuts can be made.

As part of the school funding process, the state sets the minimum dollar amount a school district must contribute to its budget. That amount is dictated by formula, and the so-called "local fair share" is based on the district's economic and social characteristics and its ability to pay.

Statewide, 80 percent of school budgets were approved by voters, an improvement over last year, when only 42 percent were approved. Raymond R. Wiss, president of the New Jersey School Boards Association, said voters recognized district efforts to stay within the new 2 percent cap on local property-tax levies.

New Jersey Education Association President Barbara Keshishian said voters agreed that children have suffered enough after last year's cuts.

Atlantic County voters, however, appeared to disagree, rejecting seven of 11 budgets, including some with tax cuts. Based on the regional funding formula, the Greater Egg budget would have reduced tax rates in Mullica and Hamilton, and raised them less than a penny in Galloway. Ciccariello said the budget maintained all academic, extracurricular and athletic programs, but that's only after they were already cut back this year.

School officials said they think the rejections reflect a local economy that is still struggling. Budgets in Weymouth Township, Wildwood, Hamilton Township and Upper Township all had no property-tax increases, yet were still defeated. Voted-down budgets in Galloway Township, Wildwood Crest and Egg Harbor City had tax increases well under the 2 percent cap, adding a penny or less to the tax rate.

"I just think people are still unemployed and tired of paying taxes," Hamilton School Business Administrator Martha Jamison said.

Galloway Township Superintendent Annette Giaquinto said the tax increase there would cost a taxpayer with a house assessed at $200,000 about $16 a year. The budget was defeated by 27 votes, and she is hoping the Township Committee takes that into consideration. Reducing the tax rate back to this year's level would mean having to cut about $500,000.

"The tax rate is already less than it was two years ago," she said. "But the economy is still challenged."

Egg Harbor City Superintendent John Gilly also hopes the closeness of the vote there - 95-80 - will convince city officials not to make drastic cuts.

A 5-cent tax-rate increase was proposed in Absecon, but solely to cover increased tuition for a record number of the district's high school students opting to attend public high schools rather than private schools, as they had in the past. Superintendent James Giaquinto said that since the tuition must be paid, cuts can be made only from the district's K-8 programs.

Absecon's budget was defeated 262-207.

"I think the council understands the situation," he said. "We did our best to get the message out."

School officials said so many cuts were made last year that any additional cuts for next year will likely have to come from programs and staff.

"If they want more cuts, it will likely lead to layoffs," Upper Township school Business Administrator Laurie Ryan said. "But we're hoping (township officials) recognize there was no tax increase, and ask for no more cuts."

Wildwood Crest school Business Administrator Greg Rohrman said his district may have to consolidate more classrooms if more cuts are made.

"Right now we're down to just programs and staff," he said. If the proposed half-penny tax increase is cut, it would mean reducing the budget $120,000, or two positions.

Weymouth Township Superintendent Donna Van Horn said the small district cannot budget any tighter, and since the Township Committee was supportive of the budget, she is hoping they will not ask for more cuts. She wished the sample ballots would tell people if the tax rate is going up or down.

"The wording includes nothing that says there is no tax increase," she said. "We don't have the money to spend on advertising, so it's hard to get the word out to the community."

Contact Diane D'Amico: 609-272-7241 DDamico@pressofac.com

Garden State Voters Approve 80 Percent of School Budgets

Light voter turnout revives various plans to move school elections to a more auspicious date

By John Mooney, April 29 in Education |1 Comment

The 80 percent of school budgets approved by voters on Wednesday was notable. So was how few voters cast ballots, even by school election standards.

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The state has not yet released statewide voter turnout figures, but county-by-county numbers showed that the annual budget votes were lightly attended in many places.

In Hudson, fewer than 10 percent of registered voters cast ballots. In Cumberland, it was below 6 percent, according to the county clerks’ preliminary results. In Union, it was just about 12 percent.

There were exceptions, of course, with Ocean topping 20 percent and Morris close at 18 percent. But it still looked to be a sharp drop statewide from the better than 26 percent who went to the polls last year, and maybe even below the paltry 14 percent to 15 percent that is the norm. (The low of 7 percent in 1985 still seems a safe record.)

The reasons for the light turnout were varied. The lack of budget rhetoric may have contributed, as well as the unusual Wednesday vote. The latter also renewed talk of moving the school elections to a more recognizable day.

"It‘s like having a party and nobody showing up," said state Sen. Shirley Turner (D-Mercer), the sponsor of a long-running bill to move the school elections to November. "Just think of the waste of money for the elections alone."

Still, she and others conceded that the prospects for the bill appear no closer than ever, despite Gov. Chris Christie making a new election date part of his "toolkit" for reigning in municipal and school spending.

"It seems like it has stalled every since [former Assembly Speaker] Joe Roberts left," Turner said, referring to the Assembly speaker who pressed the bill while in office. "It gets through a few committees but never gets posted for a final vote."

The move to November has been raised every few years. The chief arguments against it are that it would devolve into a partisan election and also that it would disrupt a school budget calendar than now runs July to June.

Turner said many school elections are already partisan, but she conceded a springtime vote could be preferable for school budgeting. She also has a bill to move the vote to the June primary election date, while a bill from state Assemblyman Joseph Cryan (D-Union) would combine all nonpartisan local elections in May.

Turner blames her bill's lack of progress on Trenton’s intractability when it comes to the status quo.

"I think some people are worried that sometimes when you increase turnout, you lose control," Turner said. "But when it’s this kind of money, we should have more people weighing in."

This year’s low turnout may in part have been a response to last year, when 59 percent of budgets were rejected – the highest rejection rate on record.

"After all the tempest last year and people up in arms for districts to tighten their belts, they felt this year that schools had gotten the message," said Patrick Murray, director of the Monmouth University Polling Institute.

"So much so, they didn’t even feel they needed to vote," he said. "And those who did, it was the people who normally come out, the families and the parents."

Murray said the new 2 percent tax cap also was a big factor, keeping the outraged away from the polls. A vast majority of districts came in well below the 2 percent cap.

"Districts worked extra hard to make sure nobody was upset," Murray said. "The fact the turnout was low is one of the hallmarks of that."

Still, it’s a perennial debate as to what can be done to engage more citizens in the school vote, the only one in which citizens vote directly on government spending -- local, state or national.

 

Star Ledger - Nearly 80 percent of N.J. school budgets pass, representing highest rate in a decade

Published: Friday, April 29, 2011, 7:30 AM     Updated: Friday, April 29, 2011, 8:12 AM

By Jessica Calefati/The Star-Ledger The Star-Ledger

Bound Brook Superintendent Edward Hoffman was not expecting his district’s budget to pass — voters in the Somerset County town have only approved the school budget twice in the past 15 years.

"In the best of years, you don’t expect our budget to pass," Hoffman said.

But for Bound Brook and hundreds of other school districts across the state, the consequences of leaner budgets last year — including program cuts, teacher layoffs, and higher extracurricular activity fees — spelled a new result:

New Jersey voters approved nearly 80 percent of the school budgets considered Wednesday, the highest rate of passage in a decade and a stunning reversal of last year’s record budget defeats, according to the New Jersey School Boards Association.

"Voters understood the difficult choices many school boards had to make this year when developing their budget proposals," said Raymond Wiss, president of the school boards association.

In total, New Jerseyans approved 429 of the 538 budgets considered, with 100 percent passage rates in Somerset, Essex and Morris counties. Most districts proposed budgets at or below the 2 percent tax cap Gov. Chris Christie and the state Legislature imposed last year.

Last year, Christie became a lightning rod for taxpayer fury over the economy by urging voters to "send a message" and defeat budgets in districts where teachers refused a pay freeze. His rhetoric helped lead six in 10 budgets to fail.

This year, Christie kept quiet on school budgets, and results swung dramatically in the opposite direction. Michael Drewniak, a spokesman for the governor, said the effective tax cap is the reason behind this year’s high budget approval rate, not Christie’s silence.

"What we take away from the results is that the new cap law worked as intended, keeping local spending under control and predictable and giving voters who pay the taxes final say on whether to exceed the cap," Drewniak said.

Plainfield, Woodbridge and Bound Brook are a few of many districts where budgets were approved Wednesday after having been rejected last year. Other districts, however, had their spending plans rejected two years in a row, including Dunellen, Spotswood and Delaware Valley Regional.

New Jersey Education Association president Barbara Keshishian said voters sent a clear message in yesterday’s school budget elections: "Our students have suffered enough.

"Even though voters are still concerned about rising property taxes, yesterday’s results show that they are not willing to sacrifice out children’s future by cutting off funding for public education," Keshishian said.

Sandy Giercyk, president of the Parsippany-Troy Hills Parent Teacher Association, said voters are starting to understand what it means to vote down a school budget. After voters defeated Parsippany’s budget last year and the district endured Christie’s repeated attacks on Superintendent Leroy Seitz’s salary, Giercyk said she was "ecstatic" about Wednesday’s approval.

"You as a taxpayer vote no, but you don’t get to pick what goes," Giercyk said. "A ‘no’ vote loses programs and services. People think it’s going to decrease teacher benefit packages. It’s not."

Staff writers Dan Goldberg and Eugene Paik contributed to this report.