Mayor Fried, School District, Meet to Discuss 2nd School Question Options

Mayor Fried, School District, Meet to Discuss
2nd School Question Options
 
Robbinsville Township Mayor Dave Fried met with school district Superintendent Brian Betze, Board of Education President Tanya Lehmann and BOE member Jai Gulati via Zoom on Wednesday, November 22, 2023 to discuss the possibility of a second public question in 2024 to help ease the district’s financial shortfalls.

The meeting, in which minutes were recorded, was requested by the district two weeks following the failure of the $4.8 million School Question on the November 7 general election ballot by a vote of 2,300 to 1,964.
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Mr. Betze said he met with the three newly-elected BOE members – Amanda D'Angelo, Harry Ray and Nadia Bandukda – after the election to “bring them up to speed,” when Ms. DeAngelo purportedly told Betze she had the votes to go back out with a $4.8 million public question – the very same amount that failed to pass last month.

“Specifically, (Amanda D'Angelo) said they have two other BOE members’ votes to win the majority on that amount,” Betze said, per the meeting minutes.

Ms. Lehmann and Mr. Gulati, Mr. Betze asked if the requested amount for the new ballot question should be in the $2.1 million to $2.7 million range after State aid is dispersed. Mr. Gulati requested Mr. Betze also calculate the reduction of more than 70 unenrolled students from any projected figures moving forward.

Ms. Lehmann, who appeared before Township Council and spoke on the record November 30 to relay her concerns with the potential reprise of the $4.8 million amount, said:

“This BOE just told the community in a letter that we heard (them) and planned to take the result of the (Democratic) process into account before going out for a new amount,” Lehmann said. “We can’t go back on our word to the community by disregarding what they told us in their vote, especially after (all current BOE members) agreed to the letter stating we’ve heard (the public), and that we would come up with something that would meet in the middle. I wasn’t contacted (about the $4.8 million proposal), so the lack of transparency concerns me as a Board member. Of course, you want to do what you can to support the schools as a member of the Board, but you were also elected by the community, and you represent their voices as well.I signed my name to a letter to the community saying: “we hear you; you voted no.”

Councilman Ron Witt was especially pointed following Ms. Lehmann’s public comment.

“If you don’t know what the need is, why are you asking for 4.8 million again?” Mr. Witt said before later opining … “your need should be a finite number.”

According to the November 22 meeting minutes, Mayor Fried predicted another $4.8 million ask “would likely fail at an even higher percentage than last time” and added that “spring referendums are harder to pass than in November.”

The school district said it is targeting a March, 2024 school question and the BOE is expected to vote on the matter at its reorganization meeting on January 2, 2024, which is also when the three new Board members will take the oath of office.

Council President Debbie Blakely expressed her concerns with the possibility of another $4.8 million proposal at the November 30 regular meeting.

“That puts us in a very bad position,” Ms. Blakely said. “If this is the number they are going to ask for, how can we get on board and support that after our residents just loudly said “no?”

“It’s also risky because if it fails again the district gets zero and then how many more teachers do we lose as a result?” Ms. Lehmann stated. “We definitely need more clarity on this.”

Mr. Witt cited the influence of social media for the current disconnect between what is actually needed, and what is desired.

“Fifty people running around yelling and screaming on Facebook and WhatsApp does not represent 16,822 people,” Mr. Witt said. “It is time to say enough with the noise. Document your need and vet your need. There’s not one person sitting up here (on the Council dais) that wants to see our schools fail. Show us what your shortfall is and give us that documentation.”

Ms. Lehmann made a second appearance before Council December 14 and thanked the mayor and governing body for their good faith collaboration with the district regarding the potential second school question.
 
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