Quality Public Education for All New Jersey Students

 

 
     4-16-06 Sunday NY Times Metro Section, front page
     4-13-06 'Budget cap puts NJ schools on edge'
     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
     EMAILNET 3-7-06 S1701 Call to Action at Gov Corzine Public Hearing
     12-8-05 GSCS and Educ community testify together for S1701 amendment bills before Assembly Educa Com
     1-17-06 Asbury Park Press "Viewpoint" letters on S1701
     Op-ed piece written by GSCS Parent Network Regional Representative Kim Newsome published in Monmouth's "Two River Times" July 2005
     LINK to the S1701 Law
     S1701 Summit Board members' report re GSCS 1-11-08 Board mtg
     1-29-06 Asbury Park Press Sunday Front Page Right
     1-24-06 Asbury Park Press 'Funding sparks heated debate'
     FYI - S1701 impacts on local districts - excerpts from NJSBA spring 2005 survey, released 9-27-05
     Posted 1-17-06 December 2005 article from the NewsTranscript of Monmouth County
     1-17-06 Asbury Park Press
     1-12-06 Asbury Park Press letter to the editor
     12-20-05 Star Ledger 'Schools lower the heat and risk a backlash'
     Recap on property tax issues and S1701 - GSCS has been requesting legislative help on school budget cost drivers for a number of years - here is one example from summer 2004
     12-16-05 Star Ledger Schools may end courtesy busing, tied to S1701 budget stressors
     12-16-05 EMAILNET
     12-12-05 EMAILNET Bills move out of Assembly Education Committee
     5-6-05 EMAILNET Important S1701 meeting in Rumson
     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
     EMAILNET 12-3-05 Heads Up!
     11-15-05 EMAILNET
     Parent Letter to Senate Education Committee Chair on S1701 and request to move amendment legislation
     S1701 EMAILNET Alert 11-28-05
     Ridgewood Board of Education member letter to legislators 11-15-05; good example letter with local legislator response
     Parent letter to legislators on S1701 and 'stalled status of amendment bills S2329 and S2278'
     EMAILNET 11-10-05 UPDATE on STATUS of S1701
     10-28-05 EMAILNET S1701 resignation, Gubernatorial election information
     AMEND S1701: GRASSROOTS BUMPER MAGNETS now available at the initiation of GSCS Rumson parent and their networking
     Readington Forum on School Funding & Meet the Assembly Candidates 11-1-05
     Invitation to October 7 Rumson hosts 'Stuff S1701' Party
     October 7 Sample Letter for 'Stuff S1701' Party Rumson area. html
     Parents in Trenton 9-21-05 Press Conference
     Link to The Hub article on Rumson Parent 5-19-05 Meeting Opposing S1701, GSCS and Assemblymen Sean Kean & Steve Coredemus co-hots
     Schools will seek Extra Funding
     Parents Give Codey an Earful
     Courier Post Online
     Bill to loosen school budgets altered
     Educators urge parents to fight school spending cap
     School funding plan gets OK from panel
     Legislature Acts to Revamp School Spending Caps
     Educators to Argue for Repeal of Cap Law
     S1701 One Board Member's Perspective
     Moody's Investment Services School Bond Rating Analysis post S1701 passage (pdf)
     EMAILNET 7-8-05 GSCS Take on Assembly Passage of A3680
     Asbury Park Press-Gannet Bureau 7-2-05 Legislature Passes Aid bill for Districts Near Abbotts
     October 13 2004 School Funding and S1701 Meeting hosted by Bergen County school group 'Dollars & Sense
     Glen Ridge Schools and Garden State Coalition co-host Dec 9 Meeting 'Public Support for Public Education v. Property Tax Stress' plus a focus on new school funding law S1701
     Red Bank Regional High School, Red Bank K-8 Schools, Little Silver, Fair Haven,Rumson-Fair Haven, Rumson K-8, Shrewsbury, and the GArden State Coalition Host December 6, 2004 Forum on the new school funding legislation S1701
     Rumson PTA, Monmouth Parents sponsor S1701 meeting, co-hosted by 11th District Assemblyman Sean Kean & the GSCS May 2005
     040430EMAILNET Govs PTax Proposal - reaction (Word)
     One Board's Example: Glen Ridge Public Schools
     Princeton Public Schools education symposium to explore impact of school cap legislation
     Real Figures and Sound Facts - A Grassroots Rebuttal to Trenton on S1701
     GSCS School Funding and S1701 Power Point - February 2005
     EMAILNET 2-21-05 S1701 and A3680 Still Stalled
     School Funding Presentation December 2004
Parents Give Codey an Earful
Succesful effort bears repeating: Parents reach out to one another to "Let Governor Codey hear directly from us on how we feel about S1701"

Thursday, February 17, 2005, from the Bergen Record.


Parents to give Codey earful
Thursday, February 17, 2005

Letters have gone home with students. Petitions were passed around at school concerts. Meetings attracted hundreds of residents.

And today, if a small army of concerned parents and educators get their way, acting Governor Codey's telephone will be ringing off the hook.

Throughout the state, opponents of a controversial law passed last summer are stepping up efforts to try to reverse the legislation, which places budget caps on school districts' spending plans in addition to limiting the surpluses districts can keep on hand.

The legislation's aim was to help provide property tax relief. But educators and school board members say the law - known as S-1701, its bill number in the state Senate - puts districts in a financial chokehold.

That's why a group of parents, teachers and school board members from Northern Valley Regional School District are hoping New Jerseyans will pick up the phone and tell Codey (or, at least, his secretary) what's on their minds.

"We all agreed this would be a great way to have our voices heard," said Julie Gleason, whose four children attend Harrington Park School.

Gleason was among other concerned parents and educators who helped create New Jersey Citizens Against Local Legislation S-1701, or NJ Calls. The call-in effort to Codey's office kicks off today as school boards around the state are putting the finishing touches on their proposed spending plans for 2005-06. Under state law, school districts must submit their proposed budgets to the Department of Education by March 8.

"It's not like we have that much time left," said Daniel Fishbein, a Ridgewood father of five who also is superintendent of Glen Ridge schools. "There is a very small window now and the window is closing."

As a parent, Fishbein says he intends to call Codey's office to voice his opposition.

As a superintendent, Fishbein said he and his school board would work to produce a budget within the parameters of the law.

But Fishbein and others say it won't be easy because the law limits annual increases in district spending plans to 2.5 percent.

The limit had been 3 percent. Districts also must cut their surpluses to no more than 3 percent of the budget. The limit had been 6 percent.

School districts argue that the new restrictions will lead to program cuts, teacher layoffs and eventually higher taxes. They also assert that shrinking their surpluses will leave them ill-prepared for unexpected costs.

Paramus Superintendent Janice Dime said her district's budgets typically have increased more than 5 percent annually. With the new caps, Paramus would lose about $1.8 million a year.

"There is no easy way without pain for us to sustain that kind of cut year after year," Dime said. Next year, for example, there is no room in the proposed budget to hire new teachers, Dime said.

Like other superintendents, Dime has encouraged her staff and parents to call Codey and other legislators. Last fall, Paramus hosted a meeting on S-1701 that drew more than 1,000 people.

"We need to continue to make the voices of parents and kids heard in Trenton until this is changed," Dime said.

Assemblywoman Joan Voss, D-Fort Lee, has co-sponsored a bill that supporters say would lift some of the restrictions of S-1701. But Codey has voiced concern that the bill could have more serious ramifications than the current budget caps.

"The concern is that the Assembly bill would just create new spending loopholes," said Sean Darcy, a spokesman for the governor.

Darcy would not comment on the call-in campaign or opposition to S-1701 beyond saying, "We're always willing to discuss changes to ensure money gets into the classroom."

E-mail: fasbach@northjersey.com