Quality Public Education for All New Jersey Students

 

 
     6-24-11 Democrat Budget Proposal brings aid to all districts
     4-29-11 BOOMERANG! Near 80 per cent of School Budgets Passed in Wednesday'sSchool Elections
     4-21-11 Supreme Court hears school funding argument
     4-14-11 Governor Releases Legislation to Address Education Reform Package
     4-8-11 Education Issues in the News
     4-7-11 Early news coverage & press releases - Governor's Brooking Inst. presentation on his education reform agenda
     3-25-11 Education Week on School Cutbacks Around The Nation
     2-7-11 Education - and Controversy - in the News
     12-5-10 Sunday News - Education-related Issues
     10-8-10 Education Issue in the News
     9-1-10 Education in the News
     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
     8-16-10 Senate Education hears 'for discussion only' comments re expanding charter school authorization process; Commissioner Schundler relays education priorities to the Committee
     8-13-10 East Brunswick Public School seeks stay on Hatikvah Charter School opening this fall (re: Hatikvah not meeting minimum enrollment requirement)
     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
     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
     6-23-10 Trenton News: State Budget on the move...Education Issues
     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 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
     4-23-10 Education issues remain headline news
     4-22-10 School Elections - in the News Today
     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'
     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
     3-30-10 Race to the Top winners helped by local buy-in
     3-29-10 The Record and Asbury Park Press - Editorials
     3-26-10 School Aid, Budget Shortfall - Impt Related Issues = Front Page News
     3-23-10 ' N.J. Gov. Chris Christie signs pension, benefits changes for state employees'
     3-23-10 State Budget Issues in the News
     3-17-10 Budget News - Gov. Chris Christie proposes sacrifices
     3-17-10 Budget News - NJ Schools Stunned By Cuts
     3-14-10 'Christie will propose constitutional amendment to cap tax hikes in N.J. budget'
     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'
     2-26-10 'NJ average property taxes grow 3.3 percent to an average of $7,300'
     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'
     2-19-10 'Acting NJ education commissioner hoping other savings can ward off cuts'
     2-22-10 Trenton Active Today
     2-16-10 'Christie Adopts Corzine Cuts, Then Some'
     1-29-10 Schools in the News
     1-20-10 'N.J. files application for federal Race to the Top education money'
     1-20-10 Editorials, Commentary on New Governor in Trenton
     1-15-10 Education News-Race to the Top incentives, NCLB annual results, supermajority vote upheld
     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 More articles + Wikipedia information re New Education Commissioner, Bret Schundler
     1-13-10 Christie Press Conference reports
     1-12-10 Change in Trenton
     1-6-10 Race to the Top Plans on the move, not without conflict
     12-23-09 Press of Atlantic City - 'Corzine forms panel to aid nonpublic schools'
     1-5-10 News articles re: lame duck
     1-4-10 'Last Call for Lame Ducks in Trenton'
     1-5-10 Update on January 4 Lame Duck Session
     12-28-09 Education Week 'Race to Top' Driving Policy Action Across States
     12-27-09 'New Jersey competes for education reform stimulus money' (aka 'Race to the Top' funds)
     12-20-09 Education in the News
     12-12 & 13-09 Education Issues in the News
     11-29-09 Ramifications - News of NJ's fiscal realities
     11-20-09 'Christie lays down his law for state'
     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
     11-11-09 'Oliver ready for Nov.23 leadership vote, wants up or down vote on marriage equality'
     11-11-09 Christie mum on fiscal emergency declaration
     11-9-09 Edcuation in the News
     11-8-09 News of Note
     11-6-09 News of Note
     11-5-09 Day After the Election News
     11-3-09 ELECTION DAY IS TODAY - SHOW UP AND VOTE FOR THE CANDIDATES OF YOUR CHOICE
     11-2-09 NY Times NJ Governors' race update
     11-4-09 Record low turnout elects Chris Chrisite NJ's Governor
     11-3-09 'Chris Christie wins N.J. governor race'
     11-1-09 Education News of Note
     Education Week on Federal Stimulus Funding Issues
     10-26-09 'High school sports spending grows as budgets get tighter inNew Jersey'
     10-22-09 News of Note
     10-20-09 News of Note
     10-19-09 Education Week 'States felling fiscal pain despite the stimulus'
     10-14-09 'Meetings are just the tip of the iceberg'
     10-7 & 9-09 Gubernatorial Campaign news: Candidates on education; Corzine on next year's state budget
     10-5-09 Gannett: Editorial & Recommendations re: Gubernatorial Campaign Issues '09
     10-4-09 NY Times 'As Property Taxes Become a Real Burden'
     10-2-09 News of Note
     10-1-09 Education Week on Acheivement Gap narrowing; Algebra Testing
     9-30-09 'Attack ads give way to issues as campaign enters final phase'
     9-30-09 Results of School Construction bond referenda rolling in
     9-27-09 Education News of Note
     9-23-09 'Tests changing for special ed students'
     9-16-09 Courier News Editorial
     9-9-09 News of Note
     9-13-09 As an issue for N.J.(Gubernatorial election), schools are in'
     9-3 & 4-09 News of Note
     8-20-09 'Nearly all NJ teachers are highly qualified'
     8-10-09 News of Note
     8-7-09 'Bill would strengthen teacher tenure rights'
     8-4-09 Recent NJ Education News of Note
     7-22-09 'State gives extra aid for schools an extraordinary boost'
     7-16-08 Schools Testing measures adopted; Test scoring upgraded - harder to pass
     7-14-09 Philadelphia Inquirer Editorial
     7-1-09 What's the Buzz: News of Note
     4-23-09 The public shows its support for public education in passing nearly 75 per cent of school budgets statewide
     4-17-09 The $609M Federal Stimulus aid to NJ - initial reactions
     4-19 and 20-09 Editorial and School Elections articles
     3-29-09 Record Editorial on Judge Doyne recommendations
     3-10-09 GOVERNOR TO DELIVER STATE BUDGET MESSAGE TODAY - SCHOOL AID FIGURES TO BE RELEASED BY THURSDAY LATEST
     1-11-09 'Corzine State of State speech to put economy front & center'
     12-28-08 NY Times 'Pension Fight Signals What Lies Ahead'
     12-29-08 NJ to new leaders - Fund our schools
     11-19-08 'Too soon to scrap Abbott'
     11-24-08 Editorial asks for preschool initiative slow down
     11-23-08 State lacks financial incentives to sell concept of school mergers
     9-24-08 Editorials re High School Redesign issues
     9-24-08 Commissioner of Education at Assembly Education Committee yesterday
     9-24-08 Supreme Court hearing on constitutionality of School Funding Reform Act
     8-29-08 'Newly hired teachers benefit from Corzine delay'
     8-26-08 What's the Buzz...
     News on the Issues - Stay Informed
     8-15-08 'Superintendents sue education commissioner'
     8-14-07 In the news today
     7-28 &29- 08 Fuel cost crisis impacting school budgets across the nation
     6-13-08 News on Education Committee actions yesterday in Trenton
     6-10-08 NJ lawmakers work on $33B spending plan Tuesday
     6-9-08 GSCS Quick Facts: TRENTON FOCUS THIS WEEK
     6-4-08 In the News
     5-21-08 News Articles & editorial
     4-30-08 'Loophole on town mergers targeted
     4-18 & 4-21-08 RECENT LEGISLATIVE PROPOSALS: 3 MAJOR POLICY CHANGES PROMOTED BY ASSEMBLY SPEAKER ROBERTS
     NEWS EDITORIALS Star Ledger 4-19 & 4-20 Ammo for Abbott Foes & Spending but with Restraint
     Recent news articles of note re: probable 'lame duck ' legislative session issues - to be or not to be- and controversial school construction report
     10-23 Media reports & Trenton responses to date re GSCS Press Conf
     In the news - Corzine on school aid formula & good news for urban schools
     9-13-07Corzine adds school aid to the lame-duck agenda
     Back to School News of Note
     8-10-07 'Standing 'O' greets Corzine as he hosts town hall mtg'
     8-8-07 Editorial 'School [construction] program needs more than a facelift'
     8-2-07 Editorial 'Reliance on property taxes must be fixed'
     8-1-07 'Paterson isn't ready to gain control' & 7-29 'The Numbers still don't add up'
     7-27-07 Retiree health costs 'time bomb'
     7-26-07 'State's tab for retirees' health care is $58B'
     7-25-07 Debate over School Tests
     7-25-07 NY Times '2 NJ school districts regain some local control'
     6-29-07 Lots of news affecting NJ, its schools and communities this week - STATE BUDGET signed - LIST OF LINE ITEM VETOES - US SUPREME CT RULING impacts school desgregation - SPECIAL EDUCATION GROUPS file suit against state
     5-21-07 In Connecticut '2 School Aid Plans Have a Similar Theme'
     5-16-07 Education Week 'Frustration Builds in NJ Funding Debate'
     5-15-07 Grad students tackle school funding issues
     4-18-07 School Budget Vote passed statewide at 78% rate - GSCS take: state aid increases a factored in offsetting property tax increases, thus boosting passing rate by 24.6%, up from last year's passing rate of 53.4%
     4-4-07 News articles, editorial & Op-Ed on bill signings for A1 and A4
     4-4-07 N Y Times, front page 'NJ Pension Fund Endangered by Diverted Billions'
     3-25-07 New York Times on NJ Comparative Spending Guide, more on Gov putting off signing A1, Tax Caps & Rebate bill
     3-16-07 News articles
     3-15-07 State eases at risk aid restrictions & 25% members of NJ Senate retiring (so far)
     3-12-07 This article tells you why you cannot get easy access to legislator votes on-line
     3-8-07 'Education Chief Revamps Department'
     3-1-07 Op Ed piece re 'Super' Superintendent in the CORE Plan
     3-1-07 Emerging Devil showing up in the details
     2-23-07 News Articles re Gov's Budget Proposal
     2-22-07 Gov's Budget Message Link & Related News Articles
     2-22-07 News articles re Governor's Budget Message this morning
     2-21-07 Associated Press 'Codey Affirms More State Aid'
     2-16 to 2-19 News Articles of Note
     2-20-07 Live from the Ledger on-line
     2-21-07 Associated Press - Codey Affrims More School Aid
     2-16 to 2-19 New Articles of Note
     2-15-07 'Parents get boost on special ed rights' Star Ledger
     2-12-07 State School Aid - needed to offset property taxes now
     2-8-07 Editorial - ' Progress, Trenton style'
     2-1-07 Turnpike for sale, Gov - need funding formula, more
     1-23-07 Tax Reform in Trenton?
     1-9-07 Countywide Pilot Program and County 'Super' Superintendent bills held again yesterday, Jan 22 next probable vote date scheduled for these bills
     1-8-07 Articles & Editorial talk about 'missing pieces' of tax reform proposal and note consequences
     1-5-07 Small-town officials protest consolidation
     1-4-07 Gov Corzine & legislative leaders agree on 4% hard cap tied to sliding scale rebates (20% max on down)
     1-3-07 GSCS Member ALERT 'County School bills' fastracked again
     12-19-06 Feedback - articles on school funding heaings yesterday
     12-18-06 Sunday editorials - take of Property Tax session
     12-14-06 Trenton News articles
     11-15-06 The Special Session Jt Committee Reports
     11-19-06 Sunday Press Articles & Commentaries
     11-16-06 Property Tax Proposal news articles
     11-14-06 Direction of Special Session Report Recommendations starting to leak into press articles
     11-13-06 Schools, property taxes fuel debates
     11-11-06 New school funding plan could add $1 billion in aid
     11-10-06 NJ education chief vows urban support
     11-4-06 Senate President & Assembly Speaker 'no new taxes'
     11-1-06 Gannett 'Halved property tax called unrealistic'
     10-31-06 The Record - Property Tax Cut Debated
     10-30-06 NY Times
     10-21-06 Education Data Study Released - how the news is being reported
     10-20-06 Education - study data released
     10-5-06 Conversation on school funding, consolidation continues
     9-25-06 Savings Little -Costs at merged schools similar
     9-20-06 Coverage of the benefits & School Funding Jt Comm hearings 9-19-06
     9-18-06 News Articles re Special Session
     9-15-06 Star Ledger - 3.25B suggested for school construction
     9-7-06 The Record Local Govts Poised to save as co-pays rise
     9-7-06 News re Jt Comm on Consolidation & Shared Services mtg 9-5
     9-6-06 Articles re Jt Comm Hearing yesterday & related school news
     9-4-06 Weekend news articles of note
     8-29-06 School Funding to be reviewed today
     8-29-06 Assoc Press - School Funding to be reviewd today
     8-29-06 Hopewell Valley article re - courtesy busing withdrawal
     8-26-06 'N.J.'s best schools in wealthiest, northern towns'
     8-23-06 Crowd assails changes to state health plan
     8-23-06 Live from the Ledger on-line
     8-20-06 AP 'Property Tax reform bid to shift to overdrive'
     8-22-06 Star Ledger Column & NY Times Editorial
     8-14-06 News Clips
     8-9-06 Special Session Jt Comm on Consolidation of Govt Services meeting 8-8-06
     8-9-06 article re today's Jt Comm on Public Employee Benfits Reform
     8-8-06 NY Times Public Pension Plans Face Billions in Shortage
     7-25-06 Associated Press Prop Tax Q & A
     7-18-06 Live from the Ledger
     7-16-06 (thru 7-21-06) Bergen Record series investigate cost of NJ public services & property tax link
     7-16-06 Bergen Record series investigate cost of NJ public services & property tax link
     7-12-06 Column on State Budget legislator items
     7-12-06 Statehouse starts talking specifics about property tax reform
     7-13-06 Articles - Property tax issues, teacher salaries, voucher suit filing
     6-30-06 State Budget news - as the dissonance must be resolved
     6-29-06 Mirroring the elements, State Budget looking like a 'natural disaster'
     6-25-06 State Budget issues: legislative branches conflict - news articles
     6-21-06 Star Ledger - Washington DC Bureau re graduation rates & quality education
     6-20-06 News articles re State Budget FY07
     6-15-06 Star Ledger, Gannet articles- Abbott advocates demand school reform at educ. dept
     6-14-06 Assembly Minority Budget Leader Joe Malone's Op Ed
     Editorial on benefit of using UEZ surplus for spec educ aid for this year
     6-12-06 News Clips
     Weekend News Clips re Property Tax & School Funding issues
     6-9-06 Star Ledger ' Salary review bill hits roadblock'
     6-7-06 News Articles re Leg Summer Session work on Property Taxes
     6-6-06 Star Ledger re Special Summer Session
     6-5-06 Editorials on school funding & State Budget articles
     6-1-06 Star Ledger Thursday article on GSCS Annl Mtg
     5-30-06 News Articles
     5-21-06 Sunday Courier Post on Schools' hiring
     5-23-06 News Articles
     5-23-06 AP 'Codey to propose school ballott change'
     5-14-06N Y Times 'For school budgets the new word is NO'
     5-17-06 Trenton Times - School Aid, budget dominate forum
     5-16-06 News fromTrenton
     5-10-06 A Lot is going on - Major News fromTrenton
     News articles re even less state revenue & SCI scapegoating
     5-5-06 News articles Gannett and Courier Post
     One example of schools consolidating services
     4-16-06 Courier Post
     4-16-06 Star Ledger editorial & article re Gov v. Abbott from 4-15-06
     4-16-06 Sunday NY Times Metro Section, front page
     40-16-06 Gannett & Asbury Park Press on School Budget election issues
     4-13-06 'Budget cap puts NJ schools on edge'
     4-7-07 The Record
     3-31-06 AP 'Budget idea puts onus on income taxes, businesses'
     3-28-06 NY Times re Texas school finance case
     3-25-06 Press of Atlantic City
     3-29-06 News Articles on State Budget testimony before the Assembly Budget Comm. yesterday in Collingswood
     3-29-06 News Articles on State Budget testimony in Collingswood 3-28-06
     3-10-06 Star Ledger 'Time is ripe for poorer districts to contribute.
     3-22-06 News Article sampling on Governor's Proposed FY07 Budget
     3-19-06 Millville, Vineland may lose Abbott status
     3-19-06 Sunday News Articles on State Budget
     3-15-06 News articles on FY07
     3-15-06 NY Times 'Crisis at School Agency Reflects Missteps'
     3-10-06 News articles GSCS related issues
     3-7-06 More articles on the Gov's Budget Summit and School Board members fo to Trenton
     2-14-06 TrentonTimes Letter to the Editor on school construction
     2-11-06 Trenton Timesn'NJ State Budget has little wiggle room'
     2-9-06 Star Ledger School agency reformers discuss goals, problems
     2-10-06 Star Ledger editorial re void of credible & useful data at Department of Education
     FUNDING HISTORY - May 27 1998 - Education Week article re Abbott V - funding above parity
     1-26-06 New York Times article re public schools fundraising for private support
     1-25-06 Star Ledger 'School District's Woes Point to Rising Tax Resistance'
     1-24-06 Asbury Park Press 'Funding sparks heated debate'
     1-15-06 Sunday Star Ledger front page on Property Taxes
     1-12-06 Star Ledger 'Lawmaker pushes tax relief plan'
     1-12-06StarLedger 'Lawmaker pushes his tax relief plan'
     1-11-06 Star Ledger - Corzine Casts Wide Net for Cabinet
     1-6 thru 1-9-06 articles on Lameduck session and School Construction
     1-5-06 Monmouth county article on S1701 ramifications,examples - hitting hard at home
     1-1-06 Press of Atlantic City
     12-30-05 School Construction and Education Funding news clips
     12-20-05 Star Ledger on NJ Supreme Court decision on stalled school construction
     12-20-05 Star Ledger 'Schools lower the heat and risk a backlash'
     12-20-05 Star Ledger
     12-20-05 The Record 'Where Will the Bills End?' NJ Supreme Court releases its opinion on stalled school construction program.
     12-14-05 Asbury ParkPress Editorial 'Re-assess the ABC's of School Funding' notes the Governor's role is critical to make positive change
     12-16-05 Star Ledger Schools may end courtesy busing, tied to S1701 budget stressors
     12-16-05 News articles of note
     Trenton Times 6-25-05 State Budget FY06 and Democrat Tensions
     Activists Hope to Revive School Funding Issue
     12-15-05 Star Ledger School bond plans get resounding 'no'
     Time Magazine
     12-10-05 Star Ledger Schools might get heating help as bill gains on spending caps
     On Star Ledger
     12-8-05 Asbury Park Press Mom takes up the torch for school funding
     12-5-05 Governor-elect Corzine selects policy advisory groups
     11-28-05 Star Ledger 'It's Lame-duck time in Trenton'
     11-20-05 Sunday Star Ledger 'Corzine's risky promise to taxpayers
     The Record 11-18-05 Corzine's tax fix to mean 'pain'
     11-17-05 Trenton Times 'Education Chief announces testing overhaul'
     11-15-05 N Y Times article
     11-13-05 Star Ledger Sunday front page 'Blueprint for 6 Billion Dollar Boondagle
     11-14-05 The Record Herb Jackson on Whitman experience a lesson for Corzine
     11-11-05 Trenton Times Corzine puts property taxes at the top of his agenda
     11-9-05 The Record - Governor Elect can't claim a mandate
     Assoc. Press NJ 6-10-05 Codey Brokering Deal on Tax Convention
     Gubernatorial Candidates' Education Plans announced September 05
     November 9 The Trenton Times - Corzine Triumphs
     November 7 YOUR VOTE TOMORROW COUNTS ... Some news articles worth reading
     11-4-05 Star Ledger State Board of Education calls for revamping school funding
     10-23-05 Sunda Star Ledger article on how property taxes work
     10-4-05 Trenton Times NJ may replenish school building fund.
     10-16-05 Sunday Star Ledger & Gannet news articles on gubernatorial candidates take on important issues related to public education issues
     10-19-05 Courier Post-Gannett article on Gubernatorial Debate
     Groups Seek Attention from Candidates 10-12-05
     10-6-05 and 10-12-05 Forrester v. Corzine, Corzine v. Forrester articles
     10-4-05 Trenton Times School Construction fund may be replenished
     9-29-05 Star Ledger 'NJ in hole for $53M after vote on school funds promised for construction
     9-26-05 Star Ledger School Construction Making the Grade is Now Up to the Voters
     9-22-05 Some news articles on the press conference - Gannett and Star Ledger
     9-23-05 Star Ledger School Construction on next Tuesday's bond referenda
     9-12-05 Associated Press Rutgers initiates new education institute
     9-9-05 Trenton Times,Corzine Education Agenda
     9-9-05 Asbury Park Press Corzine plans 25M education agenda
     Star Ledger 9-9-05 Soaring gas costs result in towns asking for cap relief
     Star Ledger 8-31-05: Though few, new schools open doors for kids
     8-19-05 Head of School Construction Agency Resigns Abruptly, Compounding Agency Turmoil
     Trenton Times 8-12-05 School funding sought
     Star Ledger Front Page 8-16-02 School districts run for school construction aid
     Herb Jackson Column 7-18-05 Budget 'cuts' more a case of creative math
     Herb Jackson Column 7-18-05 Budget 'cuts' more a case of creative math
     The Record 'get's it' Read Editorial 7-14-05
     Star Ledger 7-13-05 Codey Puts Constitutional Convention on Hole
     The Record7-10-05 Sunday Front Page Must Read
     Star Ledger 7-7-05 Local school officials told state may not provide promised construction funding
     The Record 7-3-05 State Budget Doles Out Money
     The Record 7-4-05 Rebates safe, but tax problem not nearer solution
     The Check it out - Press of Atlantic City 7-6-05 Education Funds lie in Budget Fine Print
     Star Ledger 7-2-05 Late Night Budget Passes
     The Record 7-2-05 State Budget Passes
     Gannet 7-2-05 State Budget and School Aid
     Asbury Park Press 6-28-05 Senate Passes $20M for 5 school districts
     Philadelphia Inquirer 6-30-05 Dueling Budgets Will Miss Deadline
     Asbury Park Press 6-30-05 No Consensus in Trenton on Spending Plan
     Trenton Times 6-30-05 School Construction Review Panel Formed
     Star Ledger 6-30-05 State Budget Finale on Hold
     Star Ledger 6-29-05 Bid to Save Tax Rebates Imperils NJ Budget
     The Record 6-29-05 Tax Plan Quitely Dying
     Trenton Times 6-25-05 State Budget and Democrat Tensions
     Star Ledger 6-17-05 Seniors want tax convention, Senate prefers Special Session
     050618 Press of Atlantic City 'Activists Look to Revisit School Funding Issue
     6-16-05 Philadelphia Inquirer Commission Librera Releases Abbott Designation Report
     Star Ledger 6-4-05 GSCS Annual Meeting Forrester & Schundler
     Assoc. Press NJ 6-10-05 Codey Brokering Deal on Tax Convention
     Star Ledger 6-14-05 Legislators Assail School Building Agency at Hearing
     Star Ledger 6-13-05 Legislators Assail School Construction Corp
     Trenton Times 6-10-05 Rebate Debate on Budget for FY06
     Star Ledger June 3 2005 Advance article, Annual Meeting noted
     Gannet on Annual Meeting 6-4-05 Forrester, Schundler Address School Concerns
     Gannet on Annual Meeting 6-4-05 Candidates Address School Concerns
     Assocated Press, In the Homestrech Forrester and Schundler Talk Education
     Class Sizes Disappoint Glen Ridge Parents
     SCC reforms underway 'Jump Starting the Effort to build New Schools' Star Ledger May26 2005.
     Trenton Times 5-24-05 Codey Plans for Less Pain in Budget
     Preliminary School Election Results from NJ Dept of Education
     Jersey Journal article
     State Health Benefit Plan Star Ledger 4-8-05
     Taxes, ire both on rise
     NJ lawmakers want the state to join education law protest
     Panel Tells of Referenda Woes
     GSCS Parent Leader Molly Emiliani-Livingston & GSCS Director Lynne Strickland present to Pennsylvania Bucks County
     Hopewell valley School Board Approves $63M Budget
     Schools will seek Extra Funding
     Rebate Panic
     Lack of funds amid surplus of concerns
     Enrollment Dip Hurts Special Schools
     Costly School Site Fiasco Spurs Assembly Measure
     Teacher Seeks Family to Fight Abbott Rulings
     Panel OKs Constitutional Convention on Tax Reform
     Jersey Halts New Pacts for School Construction
     Schools Face Enrollment, Aid Dilemma
     Cut is sought in Abbott District Aid
     Local News - Cuts plentiful in NJ budget proposal
     Amid probe, agency to cut school costs
     Acting governor faces tough sledding on deficit
     Parents Give Cody an Earful
     Courier Post Online
     Article Mt Laurel GSCS Summit 2-10-05
     Bill to loosen school budgets altered
     WNBC Interview
     Educators urge parents to fight school spending cap
     Assembly Panel Weighs Plan for a Property Tax Convention
     Tax-reform debate takes sharp turn
     School funding plan gets OK from panel
     Legislature Acts to Revamp School Spending Caps
     Educators to Argue for Repeal of Cap Law
     State must devise tests to comply with No Child Left Behind
11-5-09 Day After the Election News
STAR LEDGER - 'After victory, Christie asks for Dems' help' "A day after becoming the first Republican in a dozen years to capture the Statehouse, Gov.-elect Chris Christie yesterday went to the Democratic bastion of Newark and urged bipartisanship in the wake of a divisive campaign. "This administration is going to be about what works, and that's the signal I'm trying to send," said Christie..."

UPDATE: 'Christie emphasizes reform as he meets with Dems,talks school audits' GANNETT STATE BUREAU Gov.-elect Chris Christie, the newly minted Republican chief executive of normally solidly Democratic New Jersey, made a visit to a Newark charter school the first official stop in his transition to power...

'Christie sets sights on property taxes,The RECORD,STATE HOUSE BUREAU Chris Christie said he will lower New Jersey’s notoriously high property taxes... by following the deliberate approach voters approved — a mix of spending checks and more shared services.“I’ve told everybody right from the beginning that this is not a silver bullet issue...”

NY TIMES, November 5, 2009 'Christie Pledges Fight on Taxes and Business Rules' Governor-elect Christopher J. Christie of New Jersey, basking in praise from Republicans who hailed him as the party’s new star, said Wednesday that he would move quickly to suspend new regulations on business and find ways to lower crushing property taxes, the nation’s highest...[he]also said he would enforce a stricter cap on increases in spending at the local level — the primary driver of the rising property taxes that have set off anger among voters...

NY TIMES, November 5, 2009, Editorial 'The Off-Off-Year Elections' Tuesday’s vote — particularly the election of Republican governors in New Jersey and Virginia — has produced heated predictions about the revived power of Republican social conservatism and the declining fortunes of Barack Obama and his 2008 coalition....

After victory, Christie asks for Dems' help

STAR LEDGER

A day after becoming the first Republican in a dozen years to capture the Statehouse, Gov.-elect Chris Christie yesterday went to the Democratic bastion of Newark and urged bipartisanship in the wake of a divisive campaign.

"This administration is going to be about what works, and that's the signal I'm trying to send," said Christie, who will inherit a Democratic Legislature when he is sworn in Jan. 19. "This stuff of Republicans and Democrats thinking we have to be mutually exclusive has just got to be over, because the problems here are too big."

Christie also said residents should not expect a "silver bullet" to reduce New Jersey's highest-in-the nation property taxes.

He said he would follow his campaign pledges to offer municipalities grants to encourage shared services and to impose a strict limit on towns' annual spending increases. Christie, criticized by his opponents when he refused to offer hard numbers, stuck to that yesterday.

"I refused during the campaign to come up with some type of slick, packaged proposal," he said. "This is not a silver bullet issue."

As national GOP leaders hyped victories in New Jersey and Virginia as a rebuke to President Obama and a boost for the minority party in Washington, Christie refused to draw conclusions beyond the borders of his own troubled state. At the same time, he called his four-point victory over Gov. Jon Corzine an endorsement of his smaller-government philosophy.

"The points of view that I espoused in the campaign were not ambivalent," Christie said. "And the voters voted for it."

RETURN TO NEWARK

On a midday visit to the Robert Treat Academy -- a charter school and the crown jewel in the North Ward empire of Democratic power broker Steve Adubato Sr. -- Christie was instantly embraced by top Democrats, with Adubato, Newark Mayor Cory Booker and Essex County Executive Joseph DiVincenzo offering handshakes and backslaps.

Christie, who spoke about Robert Treat's academic successes nearly every day of the campaign, talked baseball with students.

"He came to the strongest bastion of Democratic power in the state," said Adubato, whose students greeted Christie with "Hip, hip, hooray!" chants, "That's a governor who's governor of everybody."

Booker, who campaigned hard for Corzine and is considered a leading candidate for governor in 2013, brushed off questions about his ambitions and refused to dissect Corzine's defeat. "Politics is over," the mayor said. "I've got to find partners for progress."

A Newark native who kicked off his campaign there, Christie made urban renewal and education reform key pieces of his platform. Though a huge turnout in GOP-heavy suburban counties put him over the top on Tuesday, Christie often stumped in cities, drawing scorn from Democrats who dominate urban centers.

Billboards of Corzine and Obama could be spotted above the Newark streets yesterday.

Though the "political yield was negligible," Christie said, his presence "was trying to send the signal to people who live in the cities that I care about their problems, and whatever they think about Republicans before, they are dealing with a different kind of Republican now."

MORE DETAILS TODAY

Hours earlier, Christie emerged from his hotel suite in Parsippany to eat breakfast with his wife, four children, father, brother and sister, and then powwow with his advisers.

He met with the leaders of his still-forming transition team, former Attorney General David Samson and Jeffrey Chiesa.

His voice hoarse, Christie addressed several hundred students -- "there was no other place I wanted to be" -- before holding a news conference. He said he was exhausted and said he would reveal further details of his transition plans today.

Christie became more animated when he reiterated campaign pledges such as issuing an executive order to halt new regulations and ordering an audit of school districts. He vowed to speak up about issues that arise during the lame-duck session of the Legislature later this month.

But he struck a mostly conciliatory tone toward lawmakers and said he reached out to Senate President Richard Codey (D-Essex) and Assembly Speaker Joseph Roberts (D-Camden).

"I don't think the well is poisoned" after the bitter campaign, Democratic state chairman Joe Cryan said. "Sometime in January or before, it's a new page."

NEW ROUTINES

Christie also settled into the new routines of a governor's life, including state troopers who shadowed him at Robert Treat -- and delivered him there right on time.

Corzine, meanwhile, remained behind closed doors as Democrats digested his defeat.

His office released photographs of the stoic-looking governor on the phone with Christie, planning the transition. He also released an e-mail message to supporters:

"Whatever our political differences, I believe that Chris Christie is going to work hard for the people of this state, and I wish the governor-elect success, patience, and good fortune as he leads our state forward," Corzine said. "Thank you for the privilege of serving as your Governor, it has been the high honor of my life."

Staff writers Susan K. Livio and David Giambusso contributed to this report.

©2009 Star Ledger

© 2009 NJ.com All Rights Reserved.

 


November 4, 2009

UPDATE: Christie emphasizes reform as he meets with Dems, talks school audits

By MICHAEL SYMONS
GANNETT STATE BUREAU

Gov.-elect Chris Christie, the newly minted Republican chief executive of normally solidly Democratic New Jersey, made a visit to a Newark charter school the first official stop in his transition to power.

The raspy-voiced, sleep-deprived Christie said he chose to make his first gubernatorial stop at the Robert Treat Academy to draw attention to success at the school and emphasize his commitment to charters and city school reform.

"Other than tax and budget issues, the next most important issue to me is fixing our urban education system. I've said that over and over and over again in the campaign," Christie said.

New Jersey has had charter schools since 1996, which are alternative public schools that now enroll around 22,000 students in the state. But Christie, in his campaign, criticized Gov. Jon S. Corzine for not doing more to expand them. The governor-elect said charter schools often get better results for less money.

"This is a model that we should replicate all over the state of New Jersey, everywhere. And there is no reason that it cannot be replicated," Christie said. "That's been my frustration over time with the educational bureaucracy in the state. It is not as if we're walking around in a dark room and saying, 'I wish we could just find the light switch.' The light switch is on. It's here."

Christie singled out the New Jersey Education Association, which resists the expansion of charter schools, for criticism. He said the NJEA spent $3 million in its effort to re-elect Corzine, through ads he says lied about his positions.

"This is a fight we're all going to have to stand up together and do, Republicans and Democrats who believe in this issue. Because the forces that are arrayed against us on this are significant and powerful — although I think they just learned in this last election, not as powerful as they think," he said.

NJEA spokesman Steven Baker offered a restrained response.

"It will not make any difference in our advocacy of great public schools. . . . We're willing to work with anybody who is willing to be an advocate of public education and great public schools," Baker said.

"We certainly did endorse Gov. Corzine in this election. He was an excellent governor, and he was a public education advocate. We unabashedly supported Gov. Corzine," he said.

Christie's foray into the North Ward of the state's largest city came with a political backdrop. The Robert Treat Academy's founder is Stephen Adubato Sr., a Democratic power broker in the city who during the assembly's introductions was hugging Christie around the shoulders and neck from the seat behind him.

The occasion also attracted visits from Newark Mayor Cory Booker, a potential Democratic candidate for governor in four years, Essex County Executive Joseph DiVincenzo and state Sen. Teresa Ruiz.

Christie said the only message Democratic lawmakers should take from the visit to Adubato's school is that "this administration will be about what works" — even if an idea comes from a Democrat or independent, he said.

Booker, who called Christie a friend and said the two exchanged text messages throughout the campaign, though never about politics, said he looks forward to working with Christie to fight crime, create jobs and lower property taxes.

"You will not see from this Democrat, and I know I speak for the county executive, this absurdity about Barack Obama that (people) hope he fails. The reality is, me and everyone on my team is rooting, cheering and willing to work with our governor-elect to make sure that he is successful," Booker said. "I'm not interested in politics right now. I've had my fill."

Christie made just two announcements about his transition team. David Samson, who was attorney general under Democratic Gov. James E. McGreevey, will chair the committee. Samson, 70, is an unaffiliated voter who lives in Caldwell.

Jeffrey Chiesa, 44, of Branchburg, a former executive assistant U.S. attorney and counsel when Christie headed that office, will be executive director of the transition committee, heading its day-to-day operations.

Christie reiterated that his first executive order upon taking office will freeze all proposed new agency rules and regulations for 90 days, while a "Red Tape Review Group' headed by Lt. Gov.-elect Kim Guadagno reviews the state's codes to identify mandates on businesses and municipalities that can be repealed.

He also said he will be asking the state comptroller to audit all school districts in the state, starting with the ones with the biggest budgets, to examine what he suspects is "significant spending" on middle management.

"You have to figure out ways to make some priority choices, either to have more of that money find its way into the classroom and/or some of that money to find its way back to the taxpayers," Christie said.


 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Christie sets sights on property taxes

Wednesday, November 4, 2009
Last updated: Thursday November 5, 2009, 7:41 AM

BY JOHN REITMEYER

The Record

STATE HOUSE BUREAU

Chris Christie said he will lower New Jersey’s notoriously high property taxes, not with a “silver bullet,” but by following the deliberate approach voters approved — a mix of spending checks and more shared services.

“I’ve told everybody right from the beginning that this is not a silver bullet issue,” Christie said to reporters Wednesday following a public event in Newark, his first as governor-elect.

“I refused during the campaign to come up with some type of slick, packaged proposal that people were going to say, ‘Oh, wow, that’s a miracle, there’s going to be no pain involved.’”

Instead, Christie’s plan for reducing property taxes targets government spending in general. The hundreds of town councils and schools districts in New Jersey where most of the money generated by local property taxes is spent are going to be held more accountable, he said.

The former U.S. attorney will enforce hard spending caps at the local level, while also freeing up municipalities from having to pay for expensive policies mandated by lawmakers in Trenton.

He said he’s also going to create a new grant program to encourage shared services and, ultimately, move toward consolidation where it makes sense to do so.

“These are going to be things that are going to lead to less spending in municipalities,” he said.

The state will also perform audits on the costliest school districts to ensure the money is being spent efficiently, Christie said.

“We have to figure out ways to make some priority judgments either to have more of that money find its way into the classroom and or some of that money to find its way back to the taxpayers,” he said.

Christie, a Republican, beat Corzine by more than 100,000 votes on Tuesday in a contest many expected to be much closer.

He acknowledged Wednesday that voters now expect changes when it comes to property taxes, but said it’s going to take time to fix a problem politicians in Trenton have been struggling with since the 1970s.

“We didn’t get to this problem overnight,” he said. “I’ve said to people right all along, this is a tough problem that has to take long-term, systemic change.”

But Christie said his realistic approach toward lowering property taxes will work.

“There’s no magic here,” he said. “We’ve tried the magic wand theory, it doesn’t work.”

“So we’re going to do it the right way,” he said.

Most polls leading up to Election Day identified property taxes as the top concern among likely voters and exit polls conducted on Tuesday indicated Christie had the edge on the property tax issue.

Yet Corzine, a Democrat, and others had criticized the plan Christie put forward during the campaign to address property taxes, saying it wasn’t detailed enough and wouldn’t work.

Corzine, as a candidate in 2005, pledged to increase property tax rebates by 40 percent, but was unable to do so.

But Corzine this time around didn’t offer much that was different from Christie’s proposals. Corzine promised to keep working a plan that featured shared services — something Trenton has been pushing with little success for years — and pressing local spending caps already enacted.

And while the governor’s approach had slowed the growth of the statewide property tax burden since 2005, his spending caps included many exceptions.

In all, the average New Jersey property tax bill in 2008 rose to $7,045, a record high.

Independent Chris Daggett, meanwhile, put forward a proposal that would have cut property taxes by 25 percent across the board by shifting more of the burden to the state sales tax.

Voters, according to exit polls, said they cared more about bringing change to the State House over any other quality, including experience or shared values.

And in a contest that was perceived nationally as a referendum on President Obama, most voters said he wasn’t a factor. Property taxes and the economy were instead the biggest issues.

E-mail: reitmeyer@northjersey.com

 

 

 

NY TIMES
November 5, 2009

Christie Pledges Fight on Taxes and Business Rules

By DAVID M. HALBFINGER

Governor-elect Christopher J. Christie of New Jersey, basking in praise from Republicans who hailed him as the party’s new star, said Wednesday that he would move quickly to suspend new regulations on business and find ways to lower crushing property taxes, the nation’s highest.

Mr. Christie also said he would enforce a stricter cap on increases in spending at the local level — the primary driver of the rising property taxes that have set off anger among voters.

In Newark, the governor-elect sought to show that he would make urban education a priority, traveling to a charter school and pressing his argument that children in the poorest cities were being held back by teachers’ unions blocking school vouchers and merit pay. Democrats have accused Republicans of ignoring the state’s ailing cities.

“Other than taxes and funding issues, the most important issue to me is fixing our urban education problem,” he said. “I am not going to allow public school children to be cheated by public schools.”

Mr. Christie, 47, the former United States attorney for New Jersey, became the first governor in New Jersey to oppose abortion since the Roe v. Wade decision. But as he did during the campaign, he signaled on Wednesday that his focus would be on bread-and-butter fiscal issues.

His election gave hope to the state’s Republicans, whose party was nearly written off a year ago, that they can still win the support of so-called Reagan Democrats and independent voters.

Mr. Christie was praised by Republican leaders, including Gov. Charlie Crist of Florida, Rudolph W. Giuliani, and the national party chairman, Michael Steele, for his decisive defeat of Gov. Jon S. Corzine despite being outspent two to one.

He faces some of the most daunting challenges in decades: high unemployment, a projected $8 billion deficit, a suffocating tax burden, crumbling roadways, an impatient electorate and a Democratic Legislature that could be as loath to help him succeed as Republicans in Congress have been to aid President Obama.

He acknowledged the dimensions of the state’s economic crisis. “We’ve got a lot to do and we know it,” he said. “The reality of last night sinks in slowly.”

Still, Mr. Christie, who warmed New Jerseyans with his love of diners and Bruce Springsteen songs, brings distinct advantages to the job. He is not beholden to public unions and he kept his campaign promises vague, and his forceful persona and prosecutorial style offer a sharp contrast to the weak public perception of his predecessor.

“His first task will have to be to make New Jersey’s governor the most powerful governor’s office in the country again,” said Pete McDonough, a top adviser to former Gov. Christie Whitman, the last Republican to win the job. “Corzine ceded the agenda to the Legislature very early. Christie’s got to be the new sheriff in town. If you’re really in charge, you can instill a sense of reality in Trenton: ‘I’m going to change it, and you’re not going to stop me.’”

Mr. Christie, however, strove to sound conciliatory on Wednesday. “Am I willing to fight? Of course I am,” he said. “I’m not a wallflower. But I don’t go in with that attitude.”

But having vanquished Mr. Corzine in Democratic areas like Gloucester County, the home of the incoming State Senate president, Stephen M. Sweeney, Mr. Christie has a strong hand to play, Mr. McDonough said. “He can turn to the Democrats in the Legislature and say, ‘Guys, your people supported me,’ ” he said.

The new governor’s biggest obstacle will be an economy in which jobs keep disappearing and foreclosures keep rising.

“Things are not as bad here as in Florida or California, the housing bust states, or the legacy automotive states,” said James W. Hughes, dean of the Bloustein School of Planning and Policy at Rutgers. “But people are going to want jobs, and a lot of focus is going to be on how effective he can be in getting job growth to resume.”

Dan Clifton, a veteran Republican budget analyst, said there were few options for major spending cuts by the state, short of privatizing the prisons or selling off assets like the toll roads, which Mr. Corzine attempted in a disastrous political failure.

“How does he not cut tax rebates?” Mr. Clifton said, referring to Mr. Christie’s campaign promise to restore the yearly checks to many homeowners that went by the wayside in this year’s budget. “The campaign is over. It’s time to think about governing.”

Ed Rollins, the Republican strategist who worked for Mrs. Whitman in 1993, said Mr. Christie would have a short honeymoon. “But if he can clean up New Jersey, which has been known for being corrupt and inefficient, at the end of the day he’s a national player,” he said.

Still, Mr. Christie’s communication skills and Jersey-guy affability could help him make his case to the public. After aristocrats like Thomas H. Kean and Mrs. Whitman, technocrats like Jim Florio and James E. McGreevey, and the Manhattan-centric Mr. Corzine, the state is getting a governor many New Jersey residents can identify with.

“If you think of how we view ourselves, that’s Chris Christie,” said Bill Baroni, a Republican state senator and close ally. “This is a guy who drives the turnpike, who knows every word to every song ever written by Springsteen, who loves his wife, who he met in college, and who moved back from college to his home state. He just loves New Jersey, and that came across.”

Nate Schweber contributed reporting.

 


NY TIMES, November 5, 2009, Editorial

The Off-Off-Year Elections

Tuesday’s vote — particularly the election of Republican governors in New Jersey and Virginia — has produced heated predictions about the revived power of Republican social conservatism and the declining fortunes of Barack Obama and his 2008 coalition.

If there were broad messages in the grab bag of contests, they were for both parties: Voters remain fearful about the economy. Independent voters are a force to be reckoned with. And everyone wants results.

In New York City, Mayor Michael Bloomberg narrowly won a third term. It is impossible to link that to President Obama — who nominally endorsed the Democrat, William Thompson Jr., but left little doubt that his affection lay with the mayor. Mr. Bloomberg won on competence. Voters who said they cared most about experience and knowledge of the city’s problems voted heavily for him.

The closeness of the race contained another message for Mr. Bloomberg: Tone down the arrogance. Voters who said they most valued a leader who understood them went overwhelmingly for Mr. Thompson. If the mayor wants to create a legacy of leadership to match his legacy of competence, he needs to be less imperious and listen more closely to his constituents.

Competence was also the issue in New Jersey. Gov. Jon Corzine, a Democrat, failed to deliver on the promise of his financial expertise and could not get even party loyalists to vote for him in sufficient numbers. Independents who were still more fed up with Mr. Corzine voted for the Republican, Christopher Christie, who won with just under 49 percent of the vote.

That election was not about Mr. Obama, although he is probably regretting the three visits he made there. It certainly was not a referendum on Republican orthodoxy, since Mr. Christie did not run as a social conservative. And while Mr. Christie did run a traditional anti-tax campaign, most voters polled on the eve of the election said they did not know much about his views.

In Virginia, Republican Robert McDonnell also avoided trademark social conservative issues like abortion and same-sex marriage. His two main pledges were to create jobs and fix the public transportation system. He handily beat R. Creigh Deeds, even in the state’s more Democratic and liberal precincts.

One race, a special election for the House of Representatives in upstate New York, did turn on an ideological divide — but it was within the Republican Party. The party’s leadership drove its candidate, Assemblywoman Dede Scozzafava, out of the race because she crossed the line on issues like abortion. The anointed conservative, Douglas Hoffman, then lost to the Democrat, Bill Owens.

So what does this all mean for next year’s election? Above all, it means that voters want their leaders to focus on sound policy making, not party orthodoxy. And the No. 1 issue in every poll is the economy.

That means that Mr. Obama and Democrats in Congress should not draw the wrong conclusion and get timid about vital tasks like health care reform or more stimulus spending to ensure that any recovery also creates more jobs. At some point, they are going to have to bite the bullet and raise taxes to pay for all of this.

Mr. Christie and Mr. McDonnell, who promised to do more for their citizens, will also have to deliver. And we suspect that they are going to find it very hard do that and cut taxes. The voters are not in a forgiving mood.