Schools
Cherry Hill Schools To See $5M Increase In State Aid
While many school districts statewide are seeing cuts, Cherry Hill will see an increase in state aid for the 2021-22 school year.

CHERRY HILL, NJ — Gov. Phil Murphy's proposed $44.8 billion budget contains increases in state aid to many schools. The Cherry Hill Public School District is looking at an increase of $5,169,745 for the 2021-22 school year.
The Murphy Administration released a proposed $18.1 billion pre-K-through-12 state school aid funding plan on Thursday for the 2021-22 school year. Nearly 200 school districts would have a decrease under his school funding plan, while more than 300 would gain.
Many districts are facing cuts as part of the ongoing reduction in aid to the district under S2, the law that enforced cuts in so-called adjustment aid to districts that have been deemed to not be paying their local fair share of property taxes.
Find out what's happening in Cherry Hillfor free with the latest updates from Patch.
On the whole, though, statewide aid would increase 6.6 percent over the 2020-21 school year under a plan that requires approval from the state legislature. That number would be larger than the 3.8 percent increase Murphy proposed last year.
Cherry Hill is one of those districts that will see an increase. It will receive $24,698,590 in state aid, up from the $19,528,845 it received last year.
Find out what's happening in Cherry Hillfor free with the latest updates from Patch.
“We were very pleased with our state aid numbers, which came in above what they have been previously,” Cherry Hill Public School District spokeswoman Barbara Wilson said. “We are in discussion about how these numbers will affect the budget and will release that information when it is determined.”
“Thank you to all those involved in fair funding,” Cherry Hill Superintendent of Schools Dr. Joseph Meloche said, referring to a community group dedicated to ensuring Cherry Hill schools receive a fair amount of state aid. “Keep your voices active, keep your voices loud. That’s a 26.47 percent increase over last year.”
The state aid was part of Murphy's 2021-22 budget proposal, which was released Tuesday. Read more: No New Tax Increases, Fees For NJ Amid COVID, Gov. Murphy Says
Statewide, the proposal calls for $578 million in additional K-12 school aid and nearly $50 million in additional preschool funding. School districts will be able to use the state funding in conjunction with federal aid to address COVID-19-related learning loss, stand up mental health programs, train educators, and remediate buildings, among other uses, according to the administration.
The 2021-22 budget proposal plans to continue the seven-year phase-in to fully fund New Jersey's school funding formula. By adding $578 million in K-12 formula aid, the Murphy administration proposes to make the full scheduled phase-in for the upcoming school year and make up for the pause in the phase-in from last year's budget.
The proposal also includes $50 million in stabilization aid to help districts adjust to the phase-in of the school funding formula and an additional $25 million for Extraordinary Special Education aid.
"After years of chronic underfunding of our classrooms, we're getting back where we need to be," Murphy said. "This is good for our students, this is good for our educators, this is good for our district and school leaders, and this is good for our educational communities."
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