Quality Public Education for All New Jersey Students

 

 
     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
     3-11-12 Education Issues in the News
     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
     2-23-12 State Aid Figures Released late today: GSCS Statement
     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
     FY'12 State School Aid District-by-District Listing, per Appropriations Act, released 110711
     GSCS Take on Governor's Budget Message for FY'12
     GSCS 3-7-11Testimony on State Budget as Proposed by the Governor for FY'12 before the Senate Budget Committee
     Gov's Budget Message for Fiscal Year 2011-2012 Today, 2pm
     GSCS FYI
     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
     NOTE: FOR CURRENT INFO ON STATE BUDGET FY'11, GO TO LINK ON LEFT SIDEBAR '2010-2011 STATE BUDGET'
     GSCS FYI - GSCS will be testifying onTuesday in Bergen County on the State Budget
     3-17-10 Budget News - Gov. Chris Christie proposes sacrifices
     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
     3-3-10 'Public Education in N.J.: Acting NJ Comm of Educ Bret Schundler says 'Opportunity'
     2-24-10 'Tight funds raise class sizes that districts long sought to cut'
     2-22-10 Christie and unions poised to do batttle over budget cuts'
     2-22-10 Trenton Active Today
     2-19-10 'Acting NJ education commissioner hoping other savings can ward off cuts'
     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
     2-12-10 News Coverage: Governor Christie's message on actions to address current fiscal year state budget deficits
     FY2010 Budget Solutions - PRESS PACKET
     School Aid Withheld Spreadsheet
     State Aid 2010 Reserve Calculation and Appeal Procedures
     State Aid Memo (2-11-10) 2 pgs
     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 'School leaders around N.J. wait and worry over state aid figures'
     1-28-10 School Surplus plan to supplant State Aid in this year gaining probability
     1-21-10'N.J.'s Christie won't rule out layoffs, furloughs to close unexpected $1.2B deficit'
     2005 Archive
     1-18-10 Advance news on 'Christie as new Governor'
     GSCS to speak at Tri-District 'Open' meeting in Monmouth on January 27
     12-15-09 GSCS is working with the Christie Transition Team
     11-29-09 Ramifications - News of NJ's fiscal realities
     Codey bill allows Budget Message to be delayed until March 16, 2010
     6-26-09 Executive Director to GSCS Trustees; Wrap Up Report - State Budget and Assembly bills this week
     6-26-09 NJ State Budget Passed late Thursday night
     6-19-09 a.m. GSCS 'Quick' FYI - State Budget Vote delayed to Thursday, June 25
     6-18-09 Deocrats say they have the votes to pass the State Budget today
     6-16-09 News from Trenton on State Budget in Senate and Assembly Budget Committees yesterday
     APPROPRIATIONS ACT FY2009-1020 as introduced
     A4100-S2010 Appropriations Act 'Scoresheet' and Language Changes released
     5-14-09 GSCS Heads Up - State Aid payments to be delayed into next Fiscal Year
     5-19-09 Treasurer David Rousseau announces additional round of cuts to Gov's proposed State Budget FY2009-2010
     4-5-09 The Record, Sunday April 5, Front Page Opinion
     Latest Title 1 'preliminary' funding under the ARRA 3-09
     Latest website filing by the USDOE on Title 1 funding
     3-13-09 Information to Districts re: Federal Stimulus- Additional Title 1 and IDEA funding information still not ready for distribution
     3-11-09 CORZINE BUDGET ADDRESS: STATE FUNDING FOR SCHOOLS A LITTLE MORE NOT LESS - FEDERAL TITLE 1 & IDEA INCREASES YET TO BE COUNTED - STATE SCHOOL AID FIGURES ON DEPT OF ED WEBSITE 1:30 TODAY - RELATED ARTICLES, MORE...
     3-10-09 GOVERNOR TO DELIVER STATE BUDGET MESSAGE TODAY - SCHOOL AID FIGURES TO BE RELEASED BY THURSDAY LATEST
     2-24-09 State Budget & Stimulus News of Note
     2-23-09 S-15 (Buono) Pension Deferral bill up for a vote in the Sentate today
     2-19-09 Federal stimulus - information re: Education funding in 'State Fiscal Stabilization' part of the package
     2-18-09 Corzine announces more cuts, more deficit
     NJ District listing, Title One & IDEA under federal stimulus law
     2-3-09 Corzine to unveil new cuts when he offers 2010 budget
     1-23-09 Schools get an eduction in thrift
     1-17-09 GSCS EMAILNET & SCHOOL FUNDING OVERVIEW
     1-16-09 Today's news notes state budget waiting on Obama stimulus package
     1-15-09 HEADS UP - Budget Message date to be delayed now to March 12
     1-14-09 Meeting with Mayors, Corzine warns of cuts
     1-9-09 State Senator requests education committee hearing on potential school funding cuts
     12-28-08 NY Times 'Pension Fight Signals What Lies Ahead'
     11-25-08 Perspective piece criticizes recent Supreme Court Abbott decision
     6-24-08 State Budget passed yesterday, as did the School Construction, Pension Reform, and Affordable Housing bills
     6-23-08 A2873-S1457 School Construction bills up for vote today, along with State Budget FY09
     6-20-08 State Budget stalls, school construction is one obstacle
     A2800 - Proposed State Budget bill released 6-17-08
     6-17-08 Legislature and Governor agree on State Budget FY09
     GOVERNOR'S PROPOSED BUDGET Fiscal Year 2009...INFO
     Office of Leg Services Analysis of Gov's Education budget FY09
     GSCS & NJ Spec. Educ.Funding Coalition on STATE FUNDING FOR EXTRAORDINARY COST FY09 issues & beyond
     6-9-08 GSCS Quick Facts: TRENTON FOCUS THIS WEEK
     3-19-08 GSCS Testimony on State Budget for Fiscal Year 2008-2009
     2-26-08 Governor Corzine's Budget Message for Fiscal Year 2008-2009
     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
     6-14-07 Revisions to State Budget filed today
     4-4-07 N Y Times, front page 'NJ Pension Fund Endangered by Diverted Billions'
     3-15-07 State eases at risk aid restrictions & 25% members of NJ Senate retiring (so far)
     3-13-07 GSCS Testimony on State Budget FY'08
     GRASSROOTS SPEAK UP re State Aid for FY07-08 & Recent Legislation that can negatively impact school communities
     Hearings Schedule for State Budget FY07-08
     3-1-07 Emerging Devil showing up in the details
     2-27-07 GSCS welcomes that state aid increases for regular operating districts helps lower & some middle income districts - will persevere to see that the state extends its share of support to education more fully to all districts
     2-23-07 News Articles re Gov's Budget Proposal
     2-22-07 GSCS EMAILNET re Gov's Budget Message
     2-22-07 Gov's Budget Message Link & Related News Articles
     2-22-07 GSCS Press Release: Governor Corzine's Budget Message today
     2-22-07 Governor Corzine's Budget Message today
     2-16 to 2-19 New Articles of Note
     2-14-07 GSCS letter to Gov Corzine & Commr of Education Davy - Request for State Aid FY0708
     NJ Assembly Session FY06 Budget Debate Majority Leader Joe Roberts standing
     7-12-06 Column on State Budget legislator items
     7-11-06 Appropriations Act bill
     7-9&10-06 State Budget news articles -wrap up & news analyses
     7-9-06 Sunday New York Times
     7-8-06 FY07 Budget approved - 19.5 in spec ed grants stays in
     7-7-06 Afternoon Friday - budget document awaiting
     7-7-06 EMAILNET - AGREEMENT ON STATE BUDGET REACHED, impt 'details' still being finalized
     7-7-06 AGREEMENT ON STAE BUDGET REACHED, impt 'details' still being finalized
     7-3-06 Roberts, Codey & Corzine still not on same page
     6-30-06 State Budget news - as the dissonance must be resolved
     6-29-06 GSCS 'QUICKNET FYI' Update on State Budget for FY 2007
     6-29-06 Mirroring the elements, State Budget looking like a 'natural disaster'
     6-25-06 State Budget issues:legislative branches conflict - news articles
     6-14-06 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 EMAILNET - Extraordinary Special Education student aid; FY07 Budget 'crunch' is on; news clips
     Weekend News Clips re Property Tax & School Funding issues
     GSCS 15th Annual Breakfast Meeting Program Info Update
     5-16-06 EMAILNET Action in Trenton
     5-10-06 EMAILNET
     5-10-06 A Lot is going on - Major News fromTrenton
     5-9-06 Supreme Ct freezes aid & Asm Budget Comm grills DOE Commissioner
     News articles
     TRENTON RALLY PROPOSED (late morning) Thurs JUNE 8
     3-28-06 GSCS testimony before Assembly Budget Comm today
     Legislative Calendar during State Budget FY07 process
     4-17-06 EMAILNET
     4-16-06 Star Ledger editorial & article re Gov v. Abbott from 4-15-06
     40-16-06 Gannett & Asbury Park Press on School Budget election issues
     4-16-06 Sunday NY Times Metro Section, front page
     Governor Corzine takes steps towards major policy initiatives.
     3-28 & 4-3-06 GSCS FY07 testimony before Senate & Assembly Budget Comm
     Grassroots at work - Ridgewood Board member testimony of FY07
     4-8-06 Corzine Administration files brief with Supreme Court re Abbott funding
     4-7-06 The Record
     3-31-06 AP 'Budget idea puts onus on income taxes, businesses'
     3-29-06 EMAILNET State Budget FY07 Hearings Update
     3-24-06 EMAILNET FYI Update on Gov Corzine's Budget FY07
     3-24-06 Schools learn who wins, loses in Corzine budget
     3-23-06 Corzine says some Abbotts can raise taxes
     3-22-06 News Article sampling on Governor's Proposed FY07 Budget
     3-22-06 EMAILNET Governor Corzine's Budget Message
     Governor's 3-21-06 Budget message & hard copy links
     3-15-06 News articles on FY07
     3-10-06 Star Ledger 'Time is ripe for poorer districts to contribute.
     EMAILNET 3-9-06 to South Jersey districts
     3-7-06 More articles on the Gov's Budget Summit and School Board members fo to Trenton
     3-7-06 Articles on Gov's Budget Summit and School Board members off to Trenton
     3-4-06 Star Ledger Interest groups to address budget
     3- 4-06 Trenton Times Likey state aid cuts frustrating districts
     3-3-06 EMAILNET Budget Discussions begin in earnest
     7-14-05 EMAILNET Record article & today's editorial re politics & inequity in school aid and S1701: Update
     Check it out - The Press of Atlantic City 7-6-05 Education Funds lie in Budget Fine Print
     3-1-06 EMAILNET State Budget FY07, Health Benefits
     2-24-06 Trenton Times - Higher schools taxes needed
     School Budget Guidelines released 2-21-07
     2-11-06 Trenton Timesn'NJ State Budget has little wiggle room'
     2-1-06 EMAILNET GSCS Advocacy FY07 Budget; On the Homepage Today
     FUNDING HISTORY - May 27 1998 - Education Week article re Abbott V - funding above parity
     2003 GSCS letter to legislators
     Star Ledger 6-29-05 Bid to Save Tax Rebates Imperils NJ Budget
     Rebate Debate on Budget for FY06
     Public Information available at New Jersey website
     S2558 Bill to provide $19.9M in Abbott aid to additional districts
     GSCS Advocacy for State Budget FY06
     GSCS Testimony: State Budget Fiscal Year 2006
4-8-06 Corzine Administration files brief with Supreme Court re Abbott funding
Attorney General Zulima Farber has filed a brief with the Supreme Court asking for the Court's permission to flat fund the Abbott districts for FY07. Significantly, the brief cites compelling statistics to underscore the validity of its request and the brief also notes the intent of the Governor to devise a new school funding formula that works appropriately and equitably for all of New Jersey's public schoolchildren. See related articles- Asbury Park Press/Gannett“Gov asks for pass on school funding ..No increase for poor districts”...New York Times“Corzine Wants Poor Schools to Make Do With Less Aid”...Star-Ledger “Court to hear Abbott case

Gov asks for pass on school funding

No increase for poor districts

Front Page, banner headline

Posted by the Asbury Park Press on 04/8/06

BY GREGORY J. VOLPE
GANNETT STATE BUREAU

TRENTON — In difficult financial times, the state can't afford to increase funding to its poorest districts that have not sufficiently improved student achievement, according to a legal filing the state submitted late Friday afternoon.

The application asks the state Supreme Court to approve Gov. Corzine's budget proposal, which doesn't increase funding for the 31 districts covered by the Abbott vs. Burke funding-equity case. The court papers say flat funding is necessary this year because of the state's fiscal troubles. In the application, Corzine pledged to find a new funding formula that focuses on children, not school districts.

"Ultimately, a new school funding formula needs to be developed that will ensure that state and local resources are applied not only in an equitable manner, but in such a way to maximize the potential of all students to achieve success," Corzine said in a statement.

David Sciarra, executive director of the Education Law Center, said his group will oppose the request in court. He agreed with the governor's call for a new formula but said the state must first fully fund education in this year's budget.

"It's unfortunate that the governor's chosen to spend time and energy in court litigating, when what we need to do is provide an appropriate aid increase for all school children in the state and find a way to get that done," said Sciarra, who said Corzine's proposal would require 4 percent to 6 percent cuts in staff and programs in the state's poorest districts.

The application revealed new oversights to ensure fiscal accountability, including hiring outside auditors to assist the state Department of Education in reviewing proposed budgets in Abbott districts, as well as comprehensive audits in selected districts, starting with Camden, Jersey City, Newark and Paterson.

"I have called upon state officials at all levels to reduce expenditures and to find ways to do more with less," Corzine said. "They have been fully responsive to this call. I expect nothing less from local municipal and school officials."

While per-pupil spending has soared in Abbott districts, local tax rates have remained low and student performance hasn't increased, according to the application.

On average, Abbotts spend about $3,000 more per pupil than the state average, with a local school tax rate one-third the state's average. Annually since 1998, local taxpayers in Abbott districts have contributed about $2,000 per child, while local per-pupil support in other low-income districts rose from $4,792 to $7,126 in that span, according to the application.

The filing also notes that Abbott school districts have received more than 80 percent of the $900 million increase in state aid the last three years.

"The present Abbott funding process has resulted in a significant funding inequity," the application says.

The application notes that Abbotts have closed some of the student achievement gap but are still well below state averages.

"While gains in achievement in Abbott districts are evident, and the achievement gap is decreasing, collectively Abbott districts are still lagging behind the state average passing rates on these assessments," the application says.

Sciarra said officials are discounting the progress that has been made in just a few years.

"The data is clear, these are very high-poverty districts that have been neglected for 50 years," Sciarra said. "And the last three or four years that we have been really working hard, there is substantial evidence that the state's investment is paying off for these kids."

Abbott districts get $4.2 billion of the $7 billion budgeted for direct formula aid to school districts in the 2006-07 funding plan. Most saw no, or nominal changes, from the year before.

Corzine's budget proposal also called for eight of the Abbott districts to raise local property taxes by as much as $125 per household or find ways to trim their budget without affecting education.

The eight districts — Asbury Park, Garfield, Jersey City, Long Branch, New Brunswick, Neptune, Newark and Perth Amboy — were selected because their property tax rate is less than half the state average.

Public education spending would increase by more than $1 billion under Corzine's plan — most of which, $743 million, comes from an increased payment to the teachers' pension fund. Even that doesn't fund what's fully required.

 

 

New York Times,  Metro Section Front Page

 

April 8, 2006

Corzine Wants Poor Schools to Make Do With Less Aid

By DAVID W. CHEN

TRENTON, April 7 — Signaling a willingness to tackle one of the most contentious issues in New Jersey politics, Gov. Jon S. Corzine announced Friday that he would ask the State Supreme Court to freeze financing for the poorest school districts because of budgetary constraints.

The amount of aid in dispute, roughly $160 million, is not that significant in a budget of $30.9 billion. But the significance of Mr. Corzine's move was not lost on anyone with a legislative, legal or an educational role in the long-running school-financing lawsuit, Abbott v. Burke.

At the behest of the court, the state must give 31 so-called Abbott districts, which include large cities like Newark and Camden, but also smaller places like Gloucester City and Pleasantville, enough financial aid to bring them up to spending levels in the wealthiest districts.

In recent years, as fiscal woes have mounted, the state has essentially frozen the level of financing for those districts not covered by the decision. Abbott districts, meanwhile, have had a little more flexibility.

But now, with the state facing a deficit of more than $4 billion, Mr. Corzine, a liberal Democrat who took office in January, is asking the Abbott districts to essentially live by the same guidelines now hemming in suburban districts — at least until a new school-financing formula can be created.

"I have called upon state officials at all levels to reduce expenditures and to find ways to do more with less," Mr. Corzine wrote in a statement, which was released late Friday afternoon. "I expect nothing less from local municipal and school officials."

To Mr. Corzine, the decision was a politically risky one that demonstrated his determination to tame the state's finances, no matter how unpopular. His budget calls for an increase in the sales tax, a new tax on hospital beds and more than $2 billion in spending cuts. His poll numbers have plummeted as a result.

But in the wake of the Abbott brief filed by Attorney General Zulima V. Farber on Friday, Mr. Corzine was hailed by Republicans who have long criticized the Abbott system as being outdated, unfair and in need of an overhaul.

"He absolutely deserves credit," said Assemblyman Bill Baroni of Mercer County. "It's Nixon going to China. Only Nixon could go to China, and I'm confident that only a Democratic governor could have had the intestinal fortitude to do this."

Assemblyman Joseph R. Malone III offered a similar opinion, saying, "I have to applaud him for having the courage to do this."

But to Democrats and advocates for the poor, particularly in urban districts, Mr. Corzine's action was bitterly disappointing and almost tantamount to a betrayal.

"What Governor Corzine is doing is unprecedented," said David G. Sciarra, executive director of the Education Law Center, which represents the plaintiffs in the Abbott case, a group of urban schoolchildren. "He's asking the court to force districts to make fairly substantial cuts in programs, cuts and positions in schools that serve New Jersey's poorest students. We will oppose this."

Mr. Corzine's move was not shocking, because he had said in his budget address that he would keep education aid flat. Still, the reality of a 41-page brief, replete with blunt language about the state's dire fiscal condition, and the problems besotting the Abbott system, resonated loudly.

And the fact that the Corzine administration released the brief late Friday — a slot usually reserved for grim or bad news — did not escape notice among supporters and detractors, as well.

Whether the application actually passes muster with the State Supreme Court is another matter altogether: The Abbott lawsuit is one of its signature decisions in the last two decades.

So from a legal perspective, both Mr. Baroni, who is also a law professor, and Paul L. Tractenberg, a Rutgers law professor, said that it was unlikely that Mr. Corzine would prevail. But Mr. Tractenberg said that nothing was certain.

"I believe that the governor has made it pretty clear he is taking a pretty hard line across the board on his various budget proposals," he said. "And if you get beyond the budget politics, the state doesn't have a very strong argument. But the court reads the newspapers like everybody else and knows that the state is in very serious trouble."

 

 

Court to hear Abbott case

Saturday, April 08, 2006

BY JOHN MOONEY

Star-Ledger Staff

With state dollars only growing tighter, the battle over how to pay for the landmark Abbott vs. Burke school equity ruling is headed back to the state's highest court.

Gov. Jon Corzine yesterday said his administration would seek approval from the state Supreme Court to freeze overall funding to the 31 Abbott districts, as he has proposed to do for all school districts under his $30.9 billion proposed budget.

The move had been expected, as the 31 districts -- including Newark, New Brunswick, Perth Amboy and Elizabeth -- are protected under the Abbott order that has brought them hundreds of millions of additional dollars for extra programs each year.

"New Jersey can no longer afford the open-ended process of annual supplemental requests that have led to the extraordinary growth in Abbott district spending, especially when we lack proof that the supplemental programs are working," said the application filed yesterday with the court.

The governor's budget would provide more than $4 billion to the Abbott districts for K-12 programs, which is more than a third of all state aid to public schools. But while most districts statewide have seen little or no additional aid for the last five years, this is the first time the Abbott money would be held steady since the 1998 ruling.

In addition, the Corzine administration has demanded a handful of Abbott districts with relatively low municipal tax rates to start sharing in some of the costs.

Advocates and Abbott school officials were told of the impending court filing this week, and they criticized Corzine last night for seeking to roll back Abbott programs that they said were starting to bring gains in student performance.

Districts had sought 4 percent to 6 percent increases to maintain programs now in place, they said.

"In this application, the governor is asking for permission to significantly cut programs and services for the poorest students in the state," said David Sciarra, executive director of the Education Law Center, which first brought the Abbott suit