This is the moment to start changing the way we think about schools in New Jersey. We can’t just keep doing business as usual. It’s too expensive, it’s too cumbersome and it continues the inequities across the state.
That’s Assemblymember Mila Jasey commenting on the breakdown in talks between Governor Murphy’s Office and the New Jersey’s School Development Authority, which is responsible for building and paying for facilities in low-income Abbott districts, now known as “SDA” districts.
Last year the School Development Authority, or SDA, was much in the news for corruption, nepotism, and buring through $12 billion in tax payer money. Things got so bad that Senate President Steve Sweeney suggested axing the agency and having the state Economic Development Authority take over construction responsibilities, an idea that Murphy rejected. But today Carly Sitrin reports in Politico that while the Governor, up for reelection this November, “continues to urge schools across New Jersey to reopen for in-person learning, and has expressed a desire to see all schools operating in classrooms in some form by the fall, conversations about the SDA have not picked up with the same urgency.”
There’s a reason for that lack of urgency. Last October NJ Ed Report summarized recent SDA projects:
A year before that, then-Camden Superintendent Paymon Rouhanifard tweeted out,
Sitrin reports,
“While lawmakers and the governor’s office debate what to do with the authority, the state Supreme Court is considering a motion that would compel Murphy’s administration to fund the SDA.
The court dismissed a similar motion last April as “premature,” expecting that Murphy and the Legislature would authorize additional school construction funding in the fiscal year 2021 budget. However, that budget did not contain any increases in school construction funding so the Education Law Center has brought the issue back to court.
In his FY 22 budget proposal, Murphy is seeking $200 million to replace borrowing for SDA projects. He’s also asking for $75 million to create a new Capital Maintenance and Emergent Needs Grants program at the SDA.
It’s unclear whether that would be enough to meet the needs of New Jersey’s schools.”
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