Businesses asked to save programs cut from Woodbridge school budget

by Sergio Bichao on May 18th | Email

Website for the Mayor's Advocacy Committee for Education.

The programs and staff cut from next year's school budget add up to a staggering $12 million.

But when looked at item by item, the amount for each cut is smaller -- small enough that parents and officials hope local businesses could be encouraged to sponsor and save the sports teams and after-school activities being lost.

A committee headed by Mayor John E. McCormac and made up of parents and business leaders this month began asking for donations to fund the activities that taxpayers will no longer support.

“We're just being decimated with programs being lost,” said Kellie Cuzzola of Colonia, a parent who serves on the 3-year-old Mayor's Advocacy Committee for Education, or MAC-E.

“In addition, we have facility needs here. Some of our auditorium seats are literally broken. We need cafeteria tables, we need desks, we need technology and often companies are looking to donate that kind of thing when they move or refurbish their facilities. It's a way to get those donations to come directly into our school system.”

So far, Colonia-based newspaper publisher Debbie Meehan has said she'll fund the Ernest Dubay Elementary and Middle School Track Meets for the district's 16 elementary schools and five middle schools next year. Before the budget cuts were announced last month, the Renaissance Woodbridge Hotel in Iselin donated furniture and supplies that the hotel replaced during a renovation.

MAC-E's wish list so far requests more than $300,000 for such items as after-school family programs in math, science and writing costing about $1,300 a school; $30,000 for middle school coaches as well as $12,000 for athletic supplies, $7,000 for volleyball and $2,000 for winter track; $6,300 for elementary and middle school track meets and $4,000 for awards; $32,447 for elementary school student councils; $8,491 for middle school clubs; $33,693 for high school clubs; and about $40,098 to bring back the district's literary magazine.

Donations to the township's education foundation, a registered non-profit organization, are tax deductible, said committee member and mayoral chief of staff Caroline Ehrlich.

The school board this week was expected to hear from its attorney on whether donations earmarked for specific programs are permitted under district policy and state law. Parents were also expecting to hear from district officials on what the protocol should be for soliciting and accepting donations.

“The [Parent Teacher Organizations] have money and we can circumvent some of these loses,” said Cuzzola, whose PTO at Colonia High School last year donated $5,000 to help bring wireless internet to the school and this year is raising money to buy laptops for the computer lab.

Erhlich said contributions from businesses don't have to be monetary. The committee's business members have mentored and invited students on field trips to their facilities. Business leaders also visit the schools.

The businesses on MAC-E are Bayshore Recycling in Keasbey, Raritan Bay Medical Center, Middlesex Water Co., TD Bank, American Properties, Carpet Maven on Main Street, Berkeley College, Hess, Wakefern Food Corp. and the Woodbridge Metro Chamber of Commerce.

For more information, call the mayor's office at 732-634-4500 or the schools superintendent's office at 732-602-8550.