Quality Public Education for All New Jersey Students

 

 
     1-12-10 Moving on...'Budget plan a wrinkle for districts'
     1-11-10 Transition News
     1-5-10 GSCS: Update on January 4 Lame Duck Session
     1-6-10 Race to the Top Plans on the move, not without conflict
     12-27-09 'New Jersey competes for education reform stimulus money' (aka 'Race to the Top' funds)
     12-23-09 Gannett article provides details on Gov. Corzine's proposal to use additional surplus in place of state aid
     12-23-09 GSCS: Governor Corzine targets excess school surplus to replace state aid payments starting in Feb '10 - lame duck legislation anticipated
     10-20-09 REMINDER: Commissioner Davy to be at 10-28 GSCS meeting in Atlantic City
     9-13-09 As an issue for N.J.(Gubernatorial election), schools are in'
     7-22-09 'State gives extra aid for schools an extraordinary boost'
     6-19-09 a.m. GSCS 'Quick' FYI - State Budget Vote delayed to Thursday, June 25
     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
     6-10-09 Education Week on Abbott Decision
     6-9-09 COMMENTARY on Supreme Court Abbott school funding decisio
     5-27-09 GSCS 18th ANNUAL MEETING - All INVITED GUESTS HAVE CONFIRMED, INCLUDING GOVERNOR CORZINE
     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
     3-29-09 Record Editorial on Judge Doyne recommendations
     3-16-09 EMAILNET
     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
     2-19-09 Federal stimulus - information re: Education funding in 'State Fiscal Stabilization' part of the package
     1-16-09 Today's news notes state budget waiting on Obama stimulus package
     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
     12-23-08 Governor faces hard choices in the New Year
     12-21-08 GSCS EMAILNET - Excerpts
     11-18-08 Ledger Online & 11-19 Star Ledger headline news
     11-18-08 Supreme Court decides in favor of Abbott districts re new school funding law
     11-5-08 Gov. Corzine U.S. Treasury Secretary?
     11-5-08 Governor Corzine candidate for Secretary of U.S. Treasury per Ledger report
     Conversation with the Commissioner in Atlantic City
     Education Commissioner Lucille Davy at GSCS Open Mtg 10-29 in A.C.
     9-24-08 Supreme Court hearing on constitutionality of School Funding Reform Act
     8-29-08 'Newly hired teachers benefit from Corzine delay'
     12-3-07 As details become clearer on the new funding plan, GSCS will report on its emerging position
     11-20-07 RELEASE OF NEW SCHOOL FUNDING FORMULA LIKELY TO BE DELAYED UNTIL AFTER THE THANKSGIVING HOLIDAY
     11-16-07 Governor Corzine's remarks on school funding to League of Municipalities
     11-8-07 Governor & Legislative leadership agree to take up - and pass - funding formula in Lame Duck
     10-23 Media reports & Trenton responses to date re GSCS Press Conf
     9-29-07 The New York Times - Patience with Corzine Wears Thin
     10-10-07 Key Questions for Legislative Candidates
     10-12-07 Coach Corzine's tactic to win the game? Punt
     In the news - Corzine on school aid formula & good news for urban schools
     9-13-07Corzine adds school aid to the lame-duck agenda
     8-10-07 'Standing 'O' greets Corzine as he hosts town hall mtg'
     8-1-07 'Paterson isn't ready to gain control' & 7-29 'The Numbers still don't add up'
     4-4-07 News articles, editorial & Op-Ed on bill signings for A1 and A4
     3-25-07 New York Times on NJ Comparative Spending Guide, more on Gov putting off signing A1, Tax Caps & Rebate bill
     3-22-07 THINGS CHANGE...Governor Corzine delays A1 becoming law
     3-21-07 The Tax Cap-Credit bill, A1, can become law by Friday without Governor's signature
     3-1-07 Emerging Devil showing up in the details
     2-23-07 News Articles re Gov's Budget Proposal
     2-22-07 GSCS EMAILNET re Gov's Budget Message
     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
     2-12-07 State School Aid - needed to offset property taxes now
     2-9-07 GSCS EMAILNET MEMBER FYI on Trenton legislation Action
     2-8-07 News artiles-editorial re Gov's annoucnement that there will not be a new school funding formula for FY0708
     2-7-07 School funding, school audits - need for new formula underscored
     2-6-07 Trenton Update - S19 Super Supt passes Senate; Tax Cap bill stalled; No funding formula in FY0708
     2-1-07 Turnpike for sale, Gov - need funding formula, more
     1-30-07 'Is Property Tax Plan Legal?'
     1-30-07 Tax Caps bill, A1, passes Assembly late last night
     1-25-07 GSCS: No School Aid = No Real Tax Relief...again
     1-24-07 Quinnipiac Poll & School Construction woes for Corzine
     1-21-07 Gannett article on 'property tax credit, annual cap vote due'
     Trenton Update Jan 9-Jan 15, Gov's State of the State, more
     1-8-07 Articles & Editorial talk about 'missing pieces' of tax reform proposal and note consequences
     1-7-06 GSCS & HARD CAPS & IMPORTANT PIECES OF THE PUZZLE STILL MISSING
     GSCS RESOLUTION FOR PUBLIC SCHOOLS 2007
     1-5-07 Small-town officials protest consolidation
     1-2-07 GSCS New Year's Resolution
     12-19-06 Feedback - articles on school funding hearings yesterday
     12-18-06 Sunday editorials - take of Property Tax session
     12-15-06 EMAILNET Bills Held!
     12-11-06 Trenton is in disarray - read news clip
     12-8 & 12-9 News clips on Trenton machinations...
     11-19-06 Sunday Press Articles & Commentaries
     11-16-06 Governor Corzine's speech on Property Tax Address to League of Municipalities
     11-10-06 NJ education chief vows urban support
     11-11-06 EMAILNET Special Session Legislative Committees report Nov. 14 or 15
     11-9-06 Public hearing on school consolidation tonight, 7 pm, at Freehold Borough Chambers, 51 Main St
     11-9-06 Public hearing on school consolidation tonight, 7 pm, in Freehold
     11-6-06 The need for special education funding to stay as a 'categorical' aid based on each students disability is real
     11-4-06 Senate President & Assembly Speaker 'no new taxes'
     10-25-06 Details on Corzine Administration's new funding formula starting to emerge
     10-5-06 EMAILNET
     10-5-06 Conversation on school funding, consolidation continues
     School Construction: Third Report to Governor by Interagency Working Group
     9-15-06 Star Ledger & AP - 3.25B suggested for school construction
     9-15-06 Star Ledger - 3.25B suggested for school construction
     August 2006 on - GSCS NOTEBOARD ON SPECIAL SESSION Committee meetings
     7-29-06 School Funding formula draws mixed reactions
     7-28-06 Gov to legislature: make history, cut taxes
     7-27-06 Trenton begins its move to address property taxes
     7-16-06 Lead economists address NJ's economy downswing
     7-12-06 Column on State Budget legislator items
     7-14-06 EMAILNET
     7-12-06 It's Official - Governor appoints Lucille Davy as Education Commissioner
     7-11-06 Talk of Special Session on Property Tax Reform
     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 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 Mirroring the elements, State Budget looking like a 'natural disaster'
     6-15-06 Star Ledger, Gannet articles- Abbott advocates demand school reform at educ. dept
     6-12-06 EMAILNET - Extraordinary Special Education student aid; FY07 Budget 'crunch' is on; news clips
     6-6-06 Legislative Leaders announce initial plans for property tax reform
     5-16-06 EMAILNET Action in Trenton
     5-10-06 A Lot is going on - Major News fromTrenton
     Gubernatorial Candidates' Education Plans announced September 05
     Governor Corzine takes steps towards major policy initiatives.
     4-8-07 Corzine Administration files brief with Supreme Court re Abbott funding
     4-7-07 The Record
     3-29-06 EMAILNET State Budget FY07 Hearings Update
     3-28-06 GSCS testimony before Assembly Budget Comm today
     3-24-06 EMAILNET FYI Update on Gov Corzine's Budget FY07
     3-23-06 Corzine says some Abbotts can raise taxes
     3-16-06 Gannett Press: Corzine wants to raise taxes, slash $2B
     Governor's Budget message 1 pm 3-21-06
     3-15-06 News articles on FY07
     3-10-06 Star Ledger 'Time is ripe for poorer districts to contribute.
     3-9-06 Governor speaks to S1701 at town meeting
     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
     12-14-05 Asbury ParkPress Editorial 'Re-assess the ABC's of School Funding' notes the Governor's role is critical in making positive change occur
     Gubernatorial, Assembly District by District, County and Municipal voting breakdowns-results & formats for November 8 elections
     2-2-06 GSCS HEADS UP re probable delay of Governor's Budget Message
     Governor Corzine's Transition Team Reports
     1-19-06 EMAILNET Quick Facts, On the Homepage Today
     1-19-06 News Articles Trenton Times, The Record, Star Ledger
     1-18-06 Star Ledger
     Governor Corzine- Inaugural Address
     1-15-06 The Record 2 Sunday Articles anticipating top issues confronting the Corzine administration
     1-11-06 Star Ledger - Corzine Casts Wide Net for Cabinet
     12-14-05 Asbury ParkPress Editorial 'Re-assess the ABC's of School Funding'
     12-5-05 Governor-elect Corzine selects policy advisory groups
     11-20-05 Sunday Star Ledger 'Corzine's risky promise to taxpayers
     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
     November 9 The Trenton Times - Corzine Triumphs
     9-9-05 Trenton Times,Corzine Education Agenda
11-8-07 Governor & Legislative leadership agree to take up - and pass - funding formula in Lame Duck
GSCS Initial Take: We are ready for and we welcome this much needed-debate. For several years GSCS has been pressing for a school funding formula to be addressed sooner than later. Until now, Trenton kept the legislature removed from this needed public discussion. A funding formula and its complex details require an open debate in the light of day.

To date, only 'parts' of a funding model have been shown to the public, and then, in theory rather than in fact. The public still has no concrete idea how the ‘whole’ formula would work or how local districts would actually be impacted by a new aid formula or the district-by-district distribution of that aid.

We welcome the release of that information and more; we look forward to an informed legislative debate on the multiple issues attendant to a new school funding formula, including how and how much state special education aid will follow the child.

Given the diverse and oft-competing needs involved in a school funding formula, it will be a tall task to reach a satisfactory compromise during the abreviated lame duck session. Whether or not an agreement can be reached during Lame Duck, there is time to move a vote on a funding plan before the Governor's budget message in February – or early March - under the new legislature, which makes certain sense since the there will be a turnover of 39 legislative seats when a new legislature is sworn in this coming January.

GANNETT Press November 8, 2007 - BUSY LAME DUCKS 'Lame-duck lawmakers may take up controversial school funding formula...Monetization plans remain under wraps'

STAR LEDGER COLUMN 'A sobering lesson for Democrats... Defeat on stem cells shows public's weary of monetary policies'

STAR LEDGER Corzine tells the voters: 'I hear you'... Governor promises state's poor finances will be put in order'

"...Instead, the leaders said the agenda for lawmakers in the lame-duck session over the next two months will include a new formula for state funding of local public schools. They said they expect Corzine to publicly reveal his proposal sometime in the next two weeks...The new funding formula is a strong possibility to be introduced and voted on during lame duck," Codey said. Roberts said the lame-duck session -- the last weeks of a legislative session when retiring lawmakers are still able to vote..."

GANNETT Press November 8, 2007 -

BUSY LAME DUCKS

Lame-duck lawmakers may take up controversial school funding formula

Monetization plans remain under wraps

Posted by the Asbury Park Press on 11/8/07

BY JONATHAN TAMARI
GANNETT STATE BUREAU

TRENTON — "Monetization" is out. "Fiscal restructuring" is in.

Democratic leaders are using a new phrase to describe Gov. Corzine's still-secret plan to squeeze billions of dollars out of state assets, such as toll roads. But otherwise the plan remains as it was before Election Day — under wraps — and will stay that way until at least January, Democratic leaders said Wednesday.

But another long-awaited proposal, a new school aid formula, will likely be hammered out during the lame-duck legislative session that begins Thursday and ends Jan. 8, when the old guard leaves Trenton and the lawmakers elected Tuesday take office.

The formula is seen as key to easing the state's property tax woes and narrowing the gap between state aid for some poor school districts that receive the lion's share of support and others that get far less assistance.

State Senate President Richard J. Codey, D-Essex, said there is a "strong possibility" that the funding plan will be discussed and voted on during the lame-duck session.

"It's a tough timetable, but do I think we can get it done? Yes, I do," Codey said.

Codey and Assembly Speaker Joseph J. Roberts Jr., D-Camden, spoke to reporters about plans for the lame-duck session after a meeting with Corzine.

The "lame-duck" voting sessions after an election but before new officials are sworn in are often used by lawmakers to handle controversial topics with fewer political consequences to worry about. Outgoing lawmakers can cast votes without facing ramifications during re-election bids.

The formula will likely be a controversial topic that helps some schools and hurts others with a new method for distributing more than $8 billion in aid.

Roberts said the plan must be handled now because it needs to be part of Corzine's next budget, which will be introduced in February. Codey said the plan may require hundreds of millions of additional dollars, but he did not say where Democrats would find the money.

Corzine's plan for the toll roads, on the other hand, is not ready for public discussion, Codey and Roberts said.

"I think the governor's committed to a very thorough public dialogue. To rush it would be irresponsible," Roberts said.

Roberts and Codey left open the possibility that the plan could still be part of the governor's next budget, which must be adopted by the end of June.

Earlier Wednesday, Corzine said he was still awaiting an opinion from the federal government on the tax implications of his plan. Depending on the answer, he said, he may have to turn to alternative ideas.

"We will be laying down a program when it is properly structured and I can make a recommendation to the public that it's sound," Corzine said.

Sen. Thomas H. Kean Jr., R-Union, said neither the school plan nor the toll road idea should come up during the lame-duck session. The school proposal, he said, could have implications for decades.

Republicans have railed against the secrecy surrounding the road plan, saying Corzine kept it off the table so it wouldn't burden Democrats during election campaigns

 

A sobering lesson for Democrats

Defeat on stem cells shows public's weary of monetary policies

Thursday, November 08, 2007

BY TOM MORAN

Star-Ledger Staff

New Jersey voters told pollsters this summer that they supported embryonic stem cell research by a margin of 71 percent to 19 percent.

Those are numbers you normally find only when you ask people if they love their mothers.

So the fact that those same voters soundly rejected the stem cell initiative on Tuesday's ballot was a shock, maybe even a turning point.

The meaning was unmistakable. Voters no longer trust Democrats to handle their money.

They're not ready yet to switch partners and hand power to Republicans. But they want their Democrats to sober up.

"We better straighten up and get our house in order," said Sen. Loretta Weinberg, a Democrat from Bergen County. "This progressive blue state is asking questions about what we Democrats actually stand for. The dialogue is going to be different now."

Democrats everywhere were hitting the same theme, sounding like students who just failed math class and were promising to do better during the next term. It might be meaningless chatter, but it was nice to hear.

Sen. Ray Lesniak, one of the Senate's premier deal-makers, acknowledged that it was a mistake for Democrats to buy votes for the stem cell initiative by making sure that every region of the state had its own research facility -- a move that drove up costs.

Yesterday, he was born again as a guy who doesn't like those messy deals.

"We need less compromising, and more principled stands in everything we do," he said. "Those of us who have been around a long time are very good at compromising. And sometimes that's necessary. But sometimes we do it too much."

Senate President Richard Codey sounded remorseful as well, as if he just realized the error of his ways.

"We haven't done a good job over the last couple of decades," he said. "It's like a household that puts too much on its credit cards."

In the next six months or so, we'll see how serious they are. Because the state faces a $3 billion budget gap this year, and a long-term deficit on pension and health costs that is beyond staggering. That pinch makes it nearly impossible to wrestle with big problems like health care and property tax reform.

So ask yourself if the Democrats have it in them to fix the budget. Can they get sober after drinking so heavily for so long?

It has to start with Gov. Jon Corzine. He's a businessman, and he has had his moments of inspiration, as when he insisted on a sales tax increase last year and made the first substantial pension payment in a decade.

But that's only a start. And let's face it -- he is at heart an aggressive liberal who is not about to solve this by shrinking the size of the government.

"I didn't run for public office to be a number cruncher or to play Scrooge," he said during a revealing moment of his budget address earlier this year.

That brings us to the strangest of all schemes, the one that no one can figure out, and the governor cannot explain -- asset monetization.

Corzine has been so cryptic that it's impossible to know what he has in mind.

We know it involves a big toll hike on state highways. The idea is to sign over that toll revenue to a third party in return for a big lump-sum payment that would be used to reduce the state debt.

Can he sell that idea to the public, and to the Legislature?

Maybe. But Democrats have already squandered a good deal of the public's trust by letting the state's finances spin out of control, and by blocking reforms that would bolster confidence in the government.

This will be Corzine's most important test so far, a make-or-break moment for the rest of his term.

And that's where Tuesday's vote of no confidence comes in. He is starting this race from deep inside a hole -- one that Democrats have been digging for years.

Tom Moran may be reached at tmoran@starledger.com or (973) 392-1823.

Corzine tells the voters: 'I hear you'

Governor promises state's poor finances will be put in order

Thursday, November 08, 2007

BY DEBORAH HOWLETT AND JOSH MARGOLIN

Star-Ledger Staff

Gov. Jon Corzine said yesterday he heard voters loud and clear in Tuesday's mid-term election and they are telling him to put the state's fiscal house in order.

"The voters have given us clear instructions to resolve our alarming and pressing financial problems," Corzine said at a Statehouse news conference. "To that purpose, I ask all of my legislative colleagues, from both parties, to join with me and put in place policies that will secure our state's financial future."

It was clearly a reference to his "asset monetization" plan, which would borrow against future toll increases on the New Jersey Turnpike and other roads.

But legislative leaders, emerging from a 90-minute meeting with Corzine later in the day, said that they will not be taking action on the governor's plan until after the new Legislature is sworn in Jan. 8.

"The plan isn't ready yet so we wouldn't have enough time to do it," Senate President Richard Codey said.

Said Assembly Speaker Joseph Roberts, "The governor is committed to a very thorough public dialogue. That's a very important issue. To rush it would be irresponsible. I think we need to take our time with it and let the governor make his case."

Instead, the leaders said the agenda for lawmakers in the lame-duck session over the next two months will include a new formula for state funding of local public schools. They said they expect Corzine to publicly reveal his proposal sometime in the next two weeks.

"The new funding formula is a strong possibility to be introduced and voted on during lame duck," Codey said.

Roberts said the lame-duck session -- the last weeks of a legislative session when retiring lawmakers are still able to vote -- should focus on business that was left unfinished when lawmakers recessed in June: appointments, a proposal to repeal the death penalty, and paid family leave.

School funding falls into the unfinished business realm, Roberts said.

"There's a timeliness associated with the school funding formula because that really needs to be in place by mid-February when the governor does his budget address. I think we would need to tackle that now," Roberts said. "And frankly that's been a work in progress for a couple of years."

Corzine indicated at the news conference that he'd be comfortable if legislators decided to take action on a school-funding formula before the end of the year.

But he cautioned that such a timeline might be too tight for his asset monetization plan, which he insists is still not ready for public consumption.

"We weren't holding back because there was an election," Corzine said. "We will be laying down a program when it is properly structured and I can make recommendations to the public that it is sound."

Corzine said he is still wrestling with the Internal Revenue Service about tax-exempt status for any public corporation created to lease the state's toll roads. If that doesn't pan out, Corzine said, "we might have to move to an alternative plan."

He also said he wants enough time to properly sell the plan to the public at town meetings in all 21 counties, as he promised earlier this year.

"The next six months is a huge opportunity for us as a state to address some of the most important issues that the state has had on its agenda, unfortunately for a decade or more," Corzine said. "Problems have been building up and building up and now is the time to address them."

In his first news conference at his Statehouse office since he signed the budget on June 28, Corzine also subtly signaled that he's solved at least one lingering issue with his "asset monetization" plan -- the dreadful name.

Corzine has taken to calling it a "financial restructuring." Codey, too, said later he'll be referring to it as "fiscal restructuring."

The plan took a political pounding over the summer, with Republicans arguing that it amounts to nothing more than a slick way to increase tolls. Top aides had urged Corzine early last year to find a term to describe his plan that didn't sound like it was wrapped in red tape.

"Whether it's monetization or restructuring under any format, the public expects to see the state's finances put in proper order. We're working on it," Corzine said.

Senate Minority Leader Leonard Lance (R-Hunterdon) said he clearly heard voters, too. "The real message to the governor and the Democratic majority is do not monetize without voter approval and certainly do not do it in lame duck," Lance said. "People are fed up with all the borrowing."

Deborah Howlett may be reached at (609) 989-0273 or dhowlett@starledger.com. Josh Margolin may be reached at (609) 989-0267 or jmargolin@starledger.com.