Schools
Anti-Bullying Law Runs Out of Cash
Ambitious and strict, the state's new anti-bullying law is also out of funds

The deal was announced in the governor’s office in early March, a bipartisan agreement to save with an infusion of cash and a promise to take a harder look at ways the state can support school districts.
Four months later, the cash for last year has been spent, none is appropriated for the next, and the task force created to examine the law and its impact is still to meet.
Such has been the checkered history of the new law, considered one of the toughest in the country for its strict rules to investigate and closely track accusations of bullying.
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But from the start, some schools have bristled at several of the requirements, with a few bringing a legal challenge against the state claiming that it was .
The state’s Council on Local Mandates agreed, and that was when Gov. Chris Christie announced a deal with the Legislature to appropriate $1 million for the implementation, .
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The $1 million was awarded last week to more than 370 districts, out of nearly $5 million in requests. The grants -- essentially a fifth of what each district requested -- ranged from $36 in Haledon to more than $38,000 in Camden. There was little clear pattern to the grants; some of the largest going to small districts, and some of the smallest to large districts.
The requests covered everything from staff training to teacher stipends to school assemblies. Haledon’s amount was a fifth of its total request for $180, reportedly to pay for additional paperwork involved in investigating claims, but a large part of the costs were for personnel and their time.
Under the law, every school must assign a staff member to be the anti-bullying specialist to oversee programs and conduct investigations, often paying him or her for the added responsibilities.
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