Schools
East Windsor Schools To See Double-Digit Increase In State Aid
East Windsor schools will see a significant increase in state aid from last year, according to numbers released by the state.
EAST WINDSOR TOWNSHIP, NJ — The East Windsor Public School District will see a double-digit increase in state aid, according to numbers recently released by the state.
East Windsor schools will receive a total of $30,529,507 in state aid for the 2020-21 school year, according to Gov. Phil Murphy’s administration. The increase comes out to $4,199,829, or 15.95 percent.
Overall, state aid would increase 3.8 over the 2019-20 school year under a plan that requires approval from the state Legislature. That number would be larger than the 2.43 percent increase Murphy proposed last year.
Find out what's happening in East Windsorfor free with the latest updates from Patch.
Other districts also saw double-digit increases in aid, including Woodbridge (28.78 percent) and North Caldwell (19.88 percent). The biggest losers happened to be in areas where Murphy may not be so popular, such Ocean and Monmouth counties.
Murphy, whose administration has taken heat for state aid cuts to hundreds of schools, also proposed a one-time $50 million burst in aid to stabilize school finances without cutting vital student programs.
Find out what's happening in East Windsorfor free with the latest updates from Patch.
An additional $336.5 million in K-12 aid and $83 million for preschool in the governor's budget plan marks an increase of over a billion dollars in state aid for schools since the beginning of the administration, he said.
In his budget remarks on Tuesday, Murphy said the investments in school funding continue to tackle the root-cause of New Jersey's high property taxes.
"The budget proposal unveiled on Tuesday furthers my administration's commitment to level the playing field across New Jersey's public education system, ensuring that all students have access to a high quality, world-class education," Murphy said. "Every dollar spent to maintain our position as the national leader in education makes New Jersey more affordable for communities, like Bound Brook, who deserve much-needed property tax relief."
The governor is proposing an increase of nearly $83 million for preschool funding, for a total of $889.2 million in the FY2021 budget proposal. The increase consists of $58 million for existing programs and $25 million for the expansion of new preschool programs. The new preschool funding is in addition to and separate from the nearly $337 million in additional K-12 school aid, or "formula aid."
The FY2021 budget proposal also continues the seven-year phase-in to full funding of the school funding formula. That law, S2, was designed to address inequities that resulted from the multiple years of overfunding some districts while "failing to adequately meet the needs of other growing districts," officials said.
See related: These 193-Plus Districts May Face Tax Hike: NJ School Aid Figures
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