Schools

Secaucus Schools Get 18 Percent Increase In Aid From Trenton

Secaucus public schools will receive $2.2 million for the 20-21 academic year, up 18 percent from the $1.8 million Secaucus got this year.

SECAUCUS, NJ — Secaucus public schools got an eighteen percent increase in state aid for the upcoming 2020-21 school year.

The state aid numbers were released Thursday by Gov. Phil Murphy's administration for every school district in New Jersey.

Secaucus public schools will receive $2.2 million for the 2020-21 academic year, up 17.95 percent from the $1.8 million Secaucus schools received this year.

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

Many other towns across New Jersey weren't so lucky and saw a reduction in aid from Trenton: 193 school districts saw a decrease under Murphy's school funding plan, and they may need to raise property taxes to make up the differences. Read: These 193-Plus Districts May Face Tax Hike: NJ School Aid Figures

And yet the budget numbers gave 371 school districts an increase in aid. The aid calculations are based on enrollment, student needs, and local fiscal capacity as measured by equalized property valuation and income, said Michael Yaple, a spokesman with the New Jersey Department of Education.

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

"The state’s current school-funding formula, the School Funding Reform Act, was enacted in 2008. However, for years New Jersey never followed the funding formula. Some districts were overfunded, while in other communities the state funding never kept pace with factors such as rapidly growing student enrollment," he explained. "Then a law enacted in 2018 aimed to eliminate years of funding inequities that built up over time. The law, which will phase in realigned funding levels over seven-year period, is designed to place all districts on the path to full funding, in which all school districts will be funded based on student enrollment and community factors as envisioned in the state’s school-funding formula."

State aid for public school districts weighs heavily in many district's decisions on raising local property taxes, which in New Jersey are already the highest in the nation.

Since he first took office, Murphy's administration has taken heat for state aid cuts to hundreds of public school districts, most notably in Ocean and Monmouth county towns such as Toms River and Middletown.

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