Schools

Wayne School Taxes Would Drop $2,100 Under Christie’s Proposed ‘Fairness Formula’

New website shows residents the tax difference under the proposal.

WAYNE, N.J. — The average homeowner stands to save more than $2,100 in annual school taxes under Governor Christie’s proposed Fairness Formula.

The proposed decrease is the most for any Passaic County municipality under the formula.

The formula, which was announced last week, would equalize per pupil spending across the state and decrease annual property taxes by thousands of dollars in many municipalities.

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

The plan aims to change the amount of state aid per pupil to a flat amount of $6,599. Its purpose is to alter the disproportionate amount of state funding allocated to Abbott school districts, which are located in “poorer, urban” areas of the state, and increase graduation rates in those districts.

The average Passaic County homeowner pays $9,697 in property taxes. New Jerseyans pay the highest annual property taxes in the United States at more than $7,300. According to Christie, an estimated 75 percent of municipalities would see more state aid and residents who live in those communities would see their annual property tax bill drop.

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

The plan was met with immediate opposition. The New Jersey Education Association called it “despicable” and an idea that would set the state’s progress in education back decades.

An interactive website has been created that breaks down the plan’s projected effect on every municipality in the state and how the formula works.

Christie said he is planning on traveling across the state this summer to discuss the plan with residents.

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