Politics & Government

School Funding Cuts For Brick Down To $720K Under Christie-Sweeney Deal: Report

The deal, among Christie, Sweeney and Prieto, is dependent on the passage of the budget, which is not guaranteed.

TRENTON, NJ — A deal between Gov. Chris Christie and state lawmakers on school funding is expected to reduce a drastic cut in state aid to the Brick Township School District from nearly $2.2 million to about $720,000, according to a report.

Townsquare Media reported the deal was reached Wednesday, though it was still dependent on the state Legislature approving the budget, something that remains up in the air as of late Thursday afternoon. Legislative sources confirmed the deal but did not provide details.

The deal would lessen the impact of the cuts that were initially proposed under the pact between State Senate President Stephen Sweeney and Assembly Speaker Vincent Prieto two weeks ago, but would not fully eliminate them.

Find out what's happening in Brickfor free with the latest updates from Patch.

The Sweeney-Prieto deal would have distributed $100 million in state aid to more than 370 districts, many of which are in critical need of funding due to increasing enrollment. That deal also would have taken $46 million from 126 districts across the state that were deemed "overfunded." Among those districts facing the worst cuts were Brick and the Toms River Regional School District in Ocean County, and the Middletown Township School District in Monmouth County. Toms River stood to lose more than $3.3 million in state aid, while Middletown was scheduled to see its aid cut by $1.18 million.

School leaders, local officials and 10th District representatives Jim Holzapfel, Greg McGuckin and Dave Wolfe, along with state legislators from several counties, spoke out against the cuts, calling the scope and the timing of the cuts devastating. Lawmakers, residents and other local officials have been lobbying Sweeney and Prieto to reconsider the cuts, which would have deeply impacted the budgets in both Brick and Toms River.

Find out what's happening in Brickfor free with the latest updates from Patch.

Brick Township interim Superintendent Thomas Gialanella (he becomes the interim director of planning, research, and evaluation as of Saturday, July 1) previously had said a cut of $2.2 million could mean canceling implementation of programs that were included in the already-approved budget.

School budgets for the 2017-18 school year had to be completed by the end of April, and the Brick budget had included funding for a new STEM teacher, a dance teacher needed to meet a state arts education requirement, and more. The district had taken steps earlier this year to address an overcrowding situation in a couple of schools with a small redistricting plan that balanced class sizes without requiring the hiring of additional teachers.

In a commentary published in the Asbury Park Press on June 25, Sweeney defended the cuts to Brick and Toms River, saying declining enrollment in the districts was the reasoning behind slashing their aid.

Brick and Toms River school officials, along with local politicians, have pointed out that the two districts are still recovering from the ravages of Superstorm Sandy; Brick Mayor John Ducey, at a joint press conference with Toms River officials and Holzapfel, McGuckin and Wolfe, said the township still has more than $300 million in ratables that have not returned to the property tax rolls.

The deal worked out between Christie, Sweeney and Prieto would reduce the cuts to 2 percent of the aid a district receives, rather than the 1.5 percent of the overall budget that was set by the Sweeney-Prieto plan. That would make the cut to Brick Township schools $720,507. While it's not $2.2 million, it's still a significant cut in a district where every penny spent results in a battle royale and at school board meetings.

According to the Timesquare Media report, whether the cuts go through as currently spelled out depends on the acceptance of a group of bills including one that would revamp Horizon Blue Cross Blue Shield of New Jersey and limit its surplus.

As of Thursday afternoon, the state budget remained in limbo, after the budget failed an initial Assembly vote, with a tally of 24-21 in favor, with 35 members of the Assembly not voting, the Asbury Park Press reported. The budget needs 41 yes votes to pass in the Assembly.

Sweeney told reporters he was not planning to post the budget for a vote on Thursday, according to the Asbury Park Press, which said senators were planning to come back to the State House on Friday to try to finalize the budget.

Even if the budget passes the Assembly, it faces an uphill battle in the Senate, as senators have begun chiming in that they will not support the budget as is due to the remaining school funding cuts. Holzapfel has said he would not support any cut, and Sen. Jennifer Beck, who represents two districts that stand to gain — Freehold and Red Bank — has been very vocal in her opposition to the cuts.

Sen. Anthony Bucco, the ranking Republican member of the Senate Budget and Appropriations Committee, criticized the Christie-Sweeney-Prieto deal on the Senate floor Thursday, saying, "Cutting three-part deals behind closed doors is the wrong way to make changes that will affect every New Jersey taxpayer."

"Many school districts will remain drastically underfunded and others will scramble to cover the cost of last-minute million-dollar cuts, after their budgets have already been set," Bucco, a Republican from the 25th District in Morris County. "This school funding scheme fails to address the systemic problems with the formula. It’s a one-year fix that will be completely unaffordable without future tax increases."

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