Schools

Both Point Pleasant and Point Pleasant Beach School Districts Would Benefit From Christie's State Aid Proposal

The governor proposed the changes on Tuesday.

The Point Pleasant Beach and Point Pleasant school districts would receive substantial state aid increases, according to the new school funding formula proposed by Gov. Christie.

Christie unveiled the change for New Jersey’s schools that would equalize spending for each student in the state on Tuesday.

That translates into potentially lower property tax bills for residents in high-cost areas, but an enormous funding loss in poorer, urban areas known as Abbott districts.

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

Christie’s plan would equalize spending to a level of $6,599 per student in the state. That figure came from the $9.1 billion spent by the state this year divided by each enrolled student in grades kindergarten through 12.

A statement released by the governor’s office Tuesday blamed the state’s “Abbott” districts – 31 school districts in court-classified “poorer urban” areas – for taking up so much of the state’s taxpayer money and funding aid.

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

The New Jersey Education Association assailed Christie’s plan, calling it despicable and claiming it would set the state’s education progress back decades.

But what would the governor’s plan, if implemented, mean to each individual school district in the state?
Both the Point Pleasant Beach and Point Pleasant school districts would see large increases in state aid, according to nj.com, which compiled a list of data showing the current per-pupil aid by district versus what that figure would be under Christie’s plan.

The Point Pleasant Beach school district currently receives only $654 per pupil in state aid for the 2016-2017 school year. If the governor's plan goes through, that number would balloon to $5,845 - an 893 percent percent increase.

The Point Pleasant school district currently receives $2,213 per pupil in state aid for the 2016-2017 school year. That amount would increase to $4,286, or 194 percent,if the governor's plan is approved.

A look at the data shows students in the Abbott districts stand to lose millions under the proposed plan. Camden would see a $23,634.77 loss per student, followed by Asbury Park, where funding would decrease $22,384.78 for each pupil.

See nj.com's full list of state districts here.

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