Gov. Christie has spoken, but Woodbridge schools waiting on budget details

by Sergio Bichao on Mar 16th | Email

As Gov. Chris Christie unveiled his $28.3 billion budget in Trenton today, superintendents around the state listened closely for any indication of how state aid would be impacted.

Christie's administration had already warned school districts to expect cuts. But even after the governor announced today that school aid would be slashed by 5 percent, the question remains: which districts will be cut, and by how much?

"At this point the details are still a bit nebulous," Woodbridge schools superintendent John Crowe said after Christie's speech.

"The real question is if there is going to be cuts in funding, will he base those cuts on where a district spends relative to their adequacy spending . . . or will the cuts be capricious and arbitrary?"

Districts should receive specific numbers by Thursday.

Districts where state aid makes up less than 5 percent state aid stand to lose all their state funding. Woodbridge's $185 million budget contains about 15 percent in state aid.

School officials, however, have argued that that percentage should be more and they point to the state's own school funding formula as the proof.

According to the state formula, Woodbridge is spending close to $18 million under "adequacy," or what it should spend. And even though the township should have received $69 million in aid this year, it received just $26 million.

"Woodbridge has been underfunded for so many years," Crowe said. "Districts who've been receiving close to its full funding might be able to absorb that. . . Other districts are now making cuts that we made years ago."

At 7 p.m. on Friday at Avenel Middle School the school board will vote on a preliminary budget for the county superintendent's approval.

The board will hold a public hearing on that budget on Wednesday, March 31, before a final adoption. The budget question will be decided by voters on Tuesday, April 20.

Other dates:
• Deadline to register to vote: Tuesday, March 30

• Deadline to apply for mail-in ballot by mail: Tuesday, April 13

• Deadline to apply for mail-in ballot in person at County Clerk's Office: Monday, April 19

FULL COVERAGE:
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EDITORIAL: Change aid plan to treat school districts more equally
Woodbridge Mayor John E. McCormac, schools superintendent oppose cutting state aid
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