Schools

Parsippany Schools To Gain More Than A Million In State Aid

The increase in funding is part of the Gov. Phil Murphy's school aid plan for the 2021-2022 school year.

PARSIPPANY, NJ — Following a particularly difficult year for New Jersey school districts during the coronavirus pandemic, scores of school districts across the state can expect decreased funding and, subsequently, a possible tax hike this year.

Gov. Phil Murphy's administration released the proposed $18.1 billion in pre-K through 12 school aid funding on Thursday for the 2021-22 school year. Nearly 200 school districts would have a decrease under his school funding plan, and they may need tax increases to mend the gap.

This year, the Parsippany-Troy Hills Township School District received $6,382,412. Next year, the district is slotted to gain $1,371,421, bringing it to $7,753,833. This represents an 21.49 percent increase in aid.

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

State aid is an influential factor in a district's decisions on raising local property taxes. Many say that aid cuts or flat spending each year gives them cause to raise what are already the highest property taxes in the country.

On the whole, state 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.

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

The state aid was part of Murphy's 2021-22 budget proposal, which was released Tuesday.

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.

"This investment is about ensuring that [students] are not left out or left alone," Murphy said in his remarks, citing the COVID-19 pandemic's prolonged effect on student learning. "We know that the learning loss is real and there are students … who have fallen behind in their studies during this time of remote and hybrid learning."

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.

Thanks for reading! Learn more about posting announcements or events to your local Patch site. Have a news tip you'd like to share? Got photos? Please include express written permission from the photographer for us to use them. Or maybe you have a press release you would like to submit or a correction you'd like to request? Send an email to russ.crespolini@patch.com

Subscribe to your local Patch newsletter. You can also have them delivered to your phone screen by downloading, or by visiting the Google Play store.

Get more local news delivered straight to your inbox. Sign up for free Patch newsletters and alerts.

More from Parsippany