Newark’s New $1.52 Billion School Budget
March 29, 2024New Jersey’s 25 Districts With the Highest Teacher Salaries
April 1, 2024100% State School Aid Is Here For 2024-25!
Jeff Bennett is a New Jersey native, K-12 public school graduate, and former teacher.
For 2024-25 Phil Murphy, with assistance from the New Jersey Legislature, a growing economy, and slightly shrinking enrollment, has done what no other governor has: the full funding of New Jersey’s state aid law.
For 2024-25, Phil Murphy’s budget proposes a $901 million net increase in K-12 formula aid. The addition of the $901 million plus $106 million in redistribution (more below) is +$1.01 billion for 423 districts and sufficient to bring every district up to a 100% minimum.
All state aid data is available at: 2024-25 State Aid.
The Big Picture
Overall, NJ’s $11.4 billion in formula aid for 1,314,974 students is $8,811 per pupil; however, state aid is concentrated in a small number of districts, with only 18 districts (with 22% of the students) getting half the formula aid. The median district only gets $2,752 per student.
The highest aided districts are Bridgeton, $24,577 per pupil, Plainfield at $23,351 pp, and Camden at $23,343, which, combined with federal aid, their own tax levies, and indirect state aid like TPAF, construction aid, and teachers Social Security brings their spending to about $30,000 per student. Those amounts are important to keep in mind in the context of arguments that will occur in the next few years that the School Funding Reform Act (SFRA) does not send enough state aid to high-Fair Local Share {FRL) districts.
At the other extreme, the lowest aided operating districts get about $1,200+ per student, with Beach Haven at the bottom with $1,158 per student. Overall, 250 districts get less than $2,000 per student.
The increase in K-12 operating aid is part of an overall billion spending increase for PreK-12 education, from $20.6 billion to $21.6 billion, out of a $55.9 billion Total Operating Budget. Education spending, ~38% of the total state budget, is high compared to the 1990s-2000s, but lower than the 40% when Phil Murphy came into office. Education spending actually is more than 100% of $19.34 billion NJ expects to bring in from income taxes, due to how education is also funded by a half-cent of the sales tax and lottery transfers (See page 66)
In terms of increases for education spending categories, the picture is as follows:
Category | Net Amount of Increase (in Millions) |
Formula Aid | $908.00 |
PreK | $124.00 |
Post Retirement Medical | $81.30 |
TPAF | $21.00 |
Teachers Social Security | $14.50 |
School Construction Debt Service | $8.40 |
Debt Service Aid | $2.50 |
Extraordinary Aid | $0.00 |
Debt Service on POBs | $0.00 |
School Building Aid | -$1.70 |
Other Aid | -$97.70 |
There Are No Underaided Districts:
In previous annual reports on the state aid distribution, I’ve had a section on the underaided districts that included information on how many were underaided, what the total deficit was, and whose deficits were the largest, but there are no underaided districts in 2024-25. For most of the period I’ve written about in NJ Education Aid there were ~370 underaided districts, and their total deficit was as high as $2 billion in 2016-17, 2017-18 and then the Covid year of 2020-21. The biggest deficit in per pupil terms was Bound Brook’s, which was underaided by $9,546 per student at its 2017-18 nadir and, in percentage terms, it was Chesterfield, which got as little as 9.5% of its Uncapped Aid.
For 2024-25, there is nothing for me to write about underaided districts. All districts are at a minimum of 100%. The S2 timeline for full funding has been met.
The $1 billion increase is going to 423 districts, although the increase is concentrated in a small number of districts. Only seventeen districts — Newark, Paterson, Elizabeth, Trenton, Irvington, Plainfield, Hamilton Township, Woodbridge, Edison, Bayonne, Perth Amboy, Orange, Union City, Camden, Pennsauken, New Brunswick, and Rahway — are getting half of the money. For context, these districts have 260,196 students, or 19.8% of NJ’s total of 1,314,973 K-12 students.
Incidentally, the Abbotts get $5,966,176,212 out of $11,586,333,299, or 51.5% of New Jersey’s state aid. They have 312,583 students out of the 1,314,973, or 24%.
Aid Losses and The Overaided
The number of districts losing state aid is smaller than the ~200 districts per year of recent past because many districts in 2023-24 were only slightly overaided and large increase in Equalization Aid (plus $599 million) slightly lowers the Local Fair Share. Therefore a few dozen districts tipped from being overaided to underaided status and gained state aid. The $105 million of aid cuts is also smaller than years past, it was a $165 million loss for 2023-24 (before re-appropriation) and $186 million loss for 2022-23.
Net Amount Redistributed | |
2024-25 | $106 million |
2023-24 | $165 million (before reallocation) |
2022-23 | $186 million |
2021-22 | $193 million |
2020-21 | $155 million |
2019-20 | $90 million |
2018-19 | $32 million |
2017-18 | $31 million |
The elimination of Adjustment Aid has been badly done because non-Abbotts were not given the tax cap liberalization to tap their tax bases to make up for the losses. However, without the nearly $1 billion in redistribution, NJ’s underaided districts would still be nowhere near fully funded, and/or NJ would not have been able to expand PreK.
There are twenty-two districts receiving more than 100% of their state aid because of provisions in S2 that protect high tax rate districts (with extra protection for Abbotts) and vo-techs. Monmouth County Vo-Tech has the biggest surplus, at $5,521,235, or $2,691 per student. Passaic City has the largest surplus of non-vo-techs, $32,174,770, or $2,639 per student. Passaic City’s $32 million surplus is also the largest in absolute terms.
Asbury Park,in the past notorious for receiving over $55 million or $23,569 per student, is no longer a high-aid district. Asbury Park for 2024-25 is only getting $16.5 million, which is $8,963 per student, and is exactly the amount that SFRA’s core formulas call for. It is also only slightly above NJ’s weighted average for state aid.
As an aside, Asbury Park’s aid loss has also been so large because it’s enrollment has continued to plummet. Its 2024-25 enrollment is only 1,846, compared to 2,350 back in 2015-16.
Six other districts would be overaided if I included Military Impact Aid.
Military Impact Aid is only $9.4 million and goes to six districts, but it’s a substantial amount per student. For instance Cape May City gets $1.2 million in Military Impact aid for only 123 students, which is $9,756 per student. However, I do not consider this “excess aid” because Military Impact Aid is governed by a different law and has a different purpose.
A few dozen districts would be overaided if I included Choice Aid in my calculations. For instance, Deal gets $2.3 million in Choice Aid for 159 resident students, a surplus of $14,821 per student. Hoboken would also be substantially overaided if I included its $2.9 million in Choice Aid. However, I’ve also elected not to include Choice Aid since Interdistrict Choice is governed by a separate state aid law and districts receiving it are doing something to earn it.
Local Fair Share and Equalization Aid-Eligibility
For 2024-25 New Jersey’s Local Fair Share formula is:
(Aggregate Income x 0.050601493 + Equalized Valuation x 0.012707978) / 2
Which is a slight decrease for each multiplier from 2023-24’s Local Fair Share formula, which was:
(Aggregate Income x 0.051068829 + Equalized Valuation x 0.012805233) / 2
In 2024-25, the median Equalization Aid-eligible district will have a tax rate of 1.33%, with 1.29% as the weighted average, this is a continuation of the fall in Local Fair Share since Local Fair Share peaked at 1.53% in 2020-21. Last year’s median Local Fair Share was a 1.36% tax rate, although the weighted average was trivially lower, at 1.28%. (Please see this about Brick & Toms River for a history of how Local Fair Share increased until 2021-22.)
2024-25 is a landmark year for state aid fairness, but it should be noted that there’s at least a five-year low for the number of districts eligible for Equalization Aid, with now only 291 (51%) eligible and 279 ineligible (49%).
Local “Fair” Share Disparities
As always, there is a extreme inequality in Local “Fair” Share.
The highest Local Fair Shares are Philly suburbs again, with Runnemede being an outlier at 2.46% (more below). Woodlynne and Merchantville are in second place, but only at 1.79%.
At the other extreme of low Local “Fair” Shares, some districts are expected to pay less than 1%. Most of the lowest-Local Fair Share districts are at the Shore, but there are other ratable-rich districts from other parts of NJ.
Injustice for Runnemede, and How it Illustrates the Lunacy of Using Aggregate Income to Calculate Local Fair Share
Runnemede, a K-8 district in Camden County with 741 students, is one of the largest aid losers for 2024-25, whose $4,150,077 aid loss is $5,600 per student.
How Runnemede got to this loss exposes the lunacy of using Aggregate Income to calculate Local Fair Share.
Runnemede | ||||||
Aggregate Income | Equalized Valuation | Local Fair Share | Local Fair Share as a Tax Rate | Adequacy Budget (for Eq Aid) | Equalization Aid Eligibility | |
2021-22 | $141,516,803 | $387,264,729 | $6,332,716 | 1.60% | $12,410,434 | $6,077,718 |
2022-23 | $152,634,381 | $402,114,095 | $6,112,593 | 1.50% | $11,764,963 | $5,652,370 |
2023-24 | $144,106,439 | $440,949,193 | $6,502,903 | 1.50% | $12,763,657 | $6,260,754 |
2024-25 | $356,315,480 | $494,924,806 | $12,159,795 | 2.50% | $13,887,713 | $1,727,918 |
Please notice that Runnemede’s Equalized Valuation grew by 12%, but the Aggregate Income grew by 147%!!
Palmyra’s situation is similar:
Palmyra | ||||||
Aggregate Income | Equalized Valuation | Local Fair Share | Local Fair Share as a Tax Rate | Adequacy Budget (for Eq Aid) | Equalization Aid Eligibility | |
2024-25 | $356,315,480 | $494,924,806 | $12,159,795 | 2.46% | $13,887,713 | $1,727,918 |
2023-24 | $144,106,439 | $440,949,193 | $6,502,903 | 1.47% | $12,763,657 | $6,260,754 |
2022-23 | $217,109,243 | $559,016,774 | $8,609,845 | 1.54% | $14,930,450 | $6,320,605 |
2021-22 | $141,516,803 | $387,264,729 | $6,332,716 | 1.64% | $12,410,434 | $6,077,718 |
2020-21 | $142,535,963 | $375,727,265 | $6,482,064 | 1.73% | $12,522,186 | $6,040,122 |
Either there is a mistake in the Department of Treasury’s Aggregate Income data for Runnemede, or a random high-income outlier in Runnemede had a windfall year or moved in, but whatever the cause, Runnemede’s 2.5% Local Fair Share tax rate is now the highest in NJ (not counting Winfield) and it lost $4.15 million.
Although the magnitude of Runnemede’s loss shocks me, I knew that this could happen as the result of the arrival of a high-income outlier or a rich person having a windfall year.
Conclusion:
2024-25 will be a landmark year in the history of NJ state aid. It exceeds my expectation back in 2017, when I thought that Phil Murphy would only allow $200-$300 million in redistribution. Phil Murphy cannot receive all the credit though. Steve Sweeney was the primary champion of S2, and all the legislators who voted for it deserve credit. Even Chris Christie should get some credit for signing Chapter 78 which freed up billions for operating aid, although that bill also has had downsides.
Unfortunately there have been losers in the redistribution. Some Adjustment Aid districts were high-spending and their cuts are things we need to accept lest they have an unfair spending advantage over other districts, but other Adjustment Aid districts, like Brick and Toms River, had to make cuts from a position of low spending. Although it was a mistake of S2’s authors not to provide tax cap relief to non-Abbotts, it was also a mistake of Brick and Toms River not to vocally ask them to.
The FY2025 budget also continues the neglect of municipal aid in NJ, which will be but by $134 million (see page 10), so education’s gain has come at the expense of other vital services.
The FY2025 budget is good for state aid, but let’s look forward to FY2026 as a year when almost all districts can gain state aid and when municipal aid can also see a long-overdue boost.