Last week I wrote about New Jersey’s “Bacon” lawsuit, an Abbott school funding case writ small. Sixteen rural districts in South Jersey, now represented by Education Law Center (which famously won the Abbott litigation twenty-five years ago) are suing the State for inadequate school funding. In the press release issued by ELC, Executive Director David Sciarra claims that “[s]tudents and families in these impoverished districts have no alternative but to return to court to secure the thorough and efficient education to which they are entitled. The State’s continuing refusal to remedy the constitutional violation in these districts is unconscionable and can no longer be tolerated.”
The sixteen Bacon districts are Buena Regional, Clayton, Commercial, Egg Harbor City, Fairfield, Hammonton Township, Lakehurst, Lakewood, Lawrence, Little Egg Harbor, Maurice River, Ocean Township, Quinton, Upper Deerfield, Wallington, and Woodbine.
In the comment section of that post last week, Jeffrey Bennett, a school board member in Essex County who has closely studied what he calls “New Jersey’s (mal)distribution of state aid,” responded with a wealth of information.
Read his comments (his moniker is “State Aid Guy”) yourself. What follows are some highlights, which include excerpts from some correspondence between fellow board members.
This is a statement by Paula White, Executive Director of JerseyCAN, on the New Jersey…
This is a press release. Earlier today, Gov. Phil Murphy signed a bill to eliminate…
Today Gov. Phil Murphy signed Senate Bill 896, which prohibits the New Jersey Department of…
The 74 conducted a study of the relative learning loss in Democratic (Blue) and Republican (Red) states and…
In October 2020 Newark Superintendent Roger Leon announced with great fanfare the opening of district’s…
This is a press release from the Governor's Office. In related news, one in five…
View Comments
I did some additional analysis of the Bacon districts using the Education Law Center's own research.
Nine of the Bacon districts, by the ELC's own standard, are not "High Need."
Clayton, Hammonton, Lakehurst, Lakewood, Lawrence, Little Egg Harbor, Maurice River, Ocean Township, and Wallington are ABOVE High Need.
I cannot fathom why the ELC would support these districts when other districts are so much needier.
http://www.edlawcenter.org/research/school-funding-data.html
Thanks, Jeff. Great research. I'd love to see ELC respond to your data.
Another unexplainable thing about the ELC's participation in the Bacon case is that only ONE of the Bacon districts (Clayton) appears on the ELC's list of the 25 most underfunded districts in NJ.
http://www.edlawcenter.org/news/archives/school-funding/top-25-most-underfunded-nj-school-districts.html
The above districts certainly should have more state aid, but I'll emphasize that none is remotely among NJ's most underaided. The most underaided districts in NJ get 10% of their uncapped aid and 50% of their capped aid.
This comment has been removed by the author.
(Just wanted to emphasize, the ELC's list is for underaiding with capped aid, not uncapped aid. Capped aid is SFRA's incremental funding rampup, uncapped aid is real, full, rational SFRA funding.
The ELC also makes its list by the raw amount per student that is missing, not the percentage of aid owed. For instance, Glen Ridge gets 45% of its (capped) SFRA aid, which is a lower percentage than in any of the ELC's most underfunded districts; however, that underaiding works out to $466 per student, an amount that is not among NJ's highest.)