Gopal: School District Funding Priorities ‘Deepy Flawed’

Gopal

Senate Education Committee Chair Vin Gopal (D-11) wants the New Jersey Department of Education Commissioner Kevin Dehmer to address the school funding crisis affecting the most underserved communities in Monmouth County – Red Bank, Long Branch, Asbury Park and Neptune.

School districts in Legislative District 11 are scheduled to lose more than $16 million in state aid in the
coming fiscal year based on the state funding formula’s latest calculations.

“As it exists, the school funding formula is deeply flawed,” said Gopal. “It denies too many
districts the time and consistency they need to best serve their students. I appreciate Commissioner
Dehmer taking the time to discuss how we can help districts navigate these cuts and take steps to address the funding formula’s shortcomings going forward.”

Gopal reminded his constituents that he has been a persistent critic of the state’s school funding formula.

Assemblywomen Margie Donlon and Luanne Peterpaul, representing the 11th District, joined Gopal in
calling for change.

“We need supplemental funding and changes to the formula. Asbury Park, Long Branch, Neptune
Township, and Red Bank are the towns hit hardest by the cuts to funding, all of which have racially and
socio-economically diverse communities,” said Peterpaul.

“These Monmouth County communities who need the most support from us will suffer because of these
reductions. We need to do everything we can to not only restore funding to our schools, but also approach changes to the formula with the hindsight of the current funding crisis,” said Donlan.

In particular, the LD11 lawmakers are pushing for revisions to the method the formula uses to calculate a district’s wealth.

The formula uses a district’s property values and the incomes of district residents to calculate how much
funding the district is expected to raise through local property taxes. When property values and incomes
in a district rise, the formula assumes the district can raise more through taxes and cuts the level of state aid provided to the district proportionately.

All four districts saw their local tax obligations rise due to spikes in those wealth indicators, but leaders
from the districts stress those metrics have some glaring flaws that cause the formula to overestimate how much their district’s can raise through local taxes.

“There was no way to predict the $10 million loss in funding to our school district. We have consistently
gained aid each year under the formula until this year. With the very sudden and steep cut to our school
district, an almost 20% decrease from last year, the Long Branch schools could be forced into scaling
back services for students and staff in order to keep our schools running,” said Long Branch Mayor
John Pallone.

Gopal said the projected numbers this year are indicative of the unreliability and volatility of the formula, which needs to be addressed.

“The formula clearly is not calibrated to assess the needs of these communities. As the state is poised to
make an historic investment in New Jersey’s schools, these districts, which serve communities that need our support, are facing devastating cuts,” Gopal said.

While revising the formula remains the ultimate goal, the latest round of funding cuts has led community leaders to call for a more immediate solution, as well.

“After years of cuts to our district’s aid, we are faced with decisions we never thought we would have to
make,” said Asbury Park Mayor John Moor. “Unless some of this funding is restored, Asbury Park will be forced to cut critical services we provide to our students and families.”

Gopal said he has been collaborating with leaders from local towns that have been hit hard by the formula to strategize on solutions and emphasize the severity of their situation to the state.

Our students, staff, and their families all play their part in supporting and fostering a healthy learning
environment – their contributions shouldn’t be jeopardized by flaws in the state formula ,” shared Neptune Township Mayor Tassie York.

“As administrators, we plan for the upcoming school year to ensure that every child receives the support
they need. While we have lost funds each year due to the school funding formula, we did not plan to lose
over a third of our state aid, as we had a decrease of 34.8% in funds,” Mayor York added. “Consistency is critical to a school district’s success, and the volatility of this formula continues to hinder our district’s success.”

Red Bank Mayor William Portman said that after several years of funding uncertainty, his district is also struggling to maintain services that local residents have come to count on. “Red Bank Boro lost 19.6% in funding compared to the previous year. The volatility of the school funding formula is unacceptable,” Senator Gopal, Assemblywoman Donlon, Assemblywoman Peterpaul, Mayor Pallone, Mayor Moor, Mayor York, and Mayor Portman are calling on the state to provide assistance to districts that continue to struggle under the formula, and make meaningful revisions to the state funding formula.

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4 responses to “Gopal: School District Funding Priorities ‘Deepy Flawed’”

  1. The Corzine Administration in 2008 came up with the school funding formula. Then Governor Chris Christie came up with the 2 percent cap on local property taxes. And then in 2018, Governor Murphy came up with the S2 legislation given districts a 7 year plan to adjust – which Vin Gopal voted for. Governor Murphy proudly announced – finally this year the school formula was fully funded. This was immediately followed by celebration and accolades that turned into shock , outrage and accusations of unfairness when the state aid calculations were issued for the 2024-2025 school year. This has been going on for over 15 years. Perhaps the formula is too complicated and needs to be tossed out with the trash. You guys can’t keep coming up with one time supplemental bills each year to lessen the blow. – just fix the problem. This formula is obviously not working as intended.

  2. How does Newark get 1 billion dollars in aid and Jersey City gets 133 million? The excuse has been that the ratables in JC have grown and that it is wealthy City. Well how about all the development that happens in Newark? The cities are similar in that they have great growth in some areas, and run down sections in others. So how does 1 City get 10x the state aid?

  3. Disconnect the education taxes from the property taxes and link education taxes to income and sales taxes. First, everyone will then pay their fair share. Second, there would be more than enough money to go around equally–unless the Democrats steal the money, as usual, and use it for their pet projects such as funding the state Democrat Party to donate to Democrat campaigns.

    After disconnecting education taxes from property taxes, terminate ALL funding for illegal aliens in this state. Funding for illegals is running between $4-$5 BILLION/YEAR. This money could be used to assist every school district.

    Eliminate the NJEA (NJ Education Association) and their push to indoctrinate children about CRT, LGBTQ+, and Transgender agendas, instead of teaching them reading, writing, math, sciences, so they can graduate high school with a level of intelligence to be able to make it in the real world.

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