SYLLABUS
(This syllabus is not part of the opinion of the Court. It has
been prepared by the Office of the Clerk for the convenience of the
reader. It has been neither reviewed nor approved by the Supreme Court. Please
note that, in the interests of brevity, portions of any opinion may not
have been summarized).
Board of Education of City of Millville v. New Jersey Department of Education
(A-4-04)
Board of Education of Township of Pemberton v. New Jersey Department of Education
Board of Education of Town of Phillipsburg v. New Jersey Department of Education
Board of Education of Township of Neptune v. New Jersey Department of Education
Argued October 27, 2004 -- Decided May 19, 2005
CHIEF JUSTICE PORITZ writing for a Unanimous Court.
Prior decisions of the Supreme Court in the
Abbott v. Burke litigation identified
the State's obligation in respect of funding for quality full-day preschools for three-
and four-year-old children in Abbott districts. This consolidated appeal revisits that obligation in
the context of funding decisions relating to preschool programs in the Abbott districts
of Millville, Neptune, Pemberton, and Phillipsburg (Districts).
State funding for preschools comes from Early Childhood Program Aid (ECPA) and Preschool
Expansion Aid (PSEA). For Fiscal Year 2004, the existing formula for ECPA funding
remained in place. PSEA awards, however, were calculated for the first time by
subtracting the 2001-2002 approved budget cost from the 2003-2004 approved costs. After the
Department of Education (DOE) had approved the early childhood budgets submitted by the
respective Districts for the 2003-2004 school year, the Districts were advised by DOE
that they would receive less than the entire approved amount from the State.
The differences were $835,034 for Phillipsburg, $424,569 for Pemberton, $1,763,866 for Millville, and
$3,768,176 for Neptune.
The Districts appealed the DOE's 2003-2004 preschool funding to the Commissioner, who referred
the matters to the Office of Administrative Law. The Administrative Law Judge (ALJ)
disagreed with the State's contention that it was not obligated to provide full
funding for preschool programs, which in the DOE's view could come from a
combination of sources, including a local tax share. The ALJ relied, in part,
on language in the Governor's annual Budget Message to support a finding that
the State had committed to full funding of all preschool costs.
On September 25, 2003, the Commissioner issued his decision in the Phillipsburg appeal.
He rejected the ALJ's conclusions and noted that the funding was consistent with
the Appropriations Act for Fiscal Year 2004, which did not contain the same
language as the Governor's Budget Message. On the same day, the Commissioner decided
the Millville, Pemberton, and Neptune appeals in the same manner; that is, that
the DOE may ask Districts to reallocate monies designated for other approved District
programs but not needed to support those programs.
The four Districts appealed to the Appellate Division, which consolidated the matters and
filed its decision on March 12, 2004. That court agreed with the Commissioner
that the Supreme Court had directed him only to "ensure" that there be
adequate funding for preschool programs and that local district funds could be used.
By its analysis of prior Abbott decisions, the Appellate Division concluded that the
Supreme Court had "chosen quite emphatic language when exclusive State funding was intended"
and that in respect of preschool programs, the Court simply imposed an obligation
on the Commissioner to "ensure" that such funding is provided.
The Appellate Division also agreed with the Commissioner that the Fiscal Year 2004
Appropriations Act eliminated any promise in the Governor's Budget Message regarding the funding
of preschool programs.
The Court granted the Districts' consolidated petition for certification.
HELD: The State must ensure that full funding is available for approved preschool
programs; however, the DOE may require the Abbott districts to reallocate monies from
other district budget accounts to make up preschool program shortfalls. The reallocated monies
will be replaced by the DOE through supplemental funding unless the DOE can
demonstrate that the monies are not needed by the Districts.
1. Prior Court decisions in the Abbott litigation have distinguished between the State's
obligations for parity and preschool funding. A requirement that the Commissioner ensure adequate
preschool funding is not the same as a requirement that the Commissioner provide
that funding. The Commissioner has clearly and expressly accepted the responsibility to restore
any district shortfalls unless he is able to demonstrate that additional funding is
unnecessary because the district has sufficient resources to cover all its program needs.
It matters little whether the monies initially reallocated by the districts are drawn
from formula aids, local levies, or savings realized through efficiencies. The key is
that the reallocation would not undermine or weaken either the school's foundational education
program or already existing supplemental programs. (pp. 17-22)
2. In an audit of the Abbott district preschool programs covering July 1,
2001, to February 28, 2003, the State Auditor reported that because of inadequate
reporting the actual costs of preschool programs could not be determined and that
enrollment projections used by the Districts were overstated. The DOE's response to the
audit indicated that a procedure for reporting actual preschool program costs for comparison
to budgeted amounts had been established. In the absence of any statement from
the parties to the contrary, the Court assumes that the Auditor's recommended controls
are in place. (See the Court's companion decision in Board of Education of
City of Passaic v. New Jersey Department of Education (A-3-04).)
(pp. 22-24)
3. The Court emphasizes that in respect of any reallocation of resources by
a district to cover the cost of shortfalls created by formula-driven funding, the
burden is on the Commissioner to prove that the reallocation will not compromise
any of the district's educational programs. (p. 24)
4. Although the DOE argued below that these matters were not ripe for
adjudication because decisions about additional aid had not yet been made, the cases
proceeded on the "global" issue of the State's funding scheme. Based on the
Commissioner's representation regarding supplemental funding, the Court upholds the State's funding scheme. It
cautions, however, that the scheme is both cumbersome and time-consuming, and it urges
the DOE to implement a method of allocation aligned in the first instance
with the districts' approved budgets. (pp. 24-25; 3-4)
The judgment of the Appellate Division is AFFIRMED.
JUSTICES LONG, LaVECCHIA, ALBIN, WALLACE, and RIVERA-SOTO and Appellate Division JUDGE STERN (t/a)
join in CHIEF JUSTICE PORITZ's opinion. JUSTICE ZAZZALI did not participate.
SUPREME COURT OF NEW JERSEY
A-
4 September Term 2004
BOARD OF EDUCATION OF THE CITY OF MILLVILLE, CUMBERLAND COUNTY,
Petitioner-Appellant,
v.
NEW JERSEY DEPARTMENT OF EDUCATION,
Respondent-Respondent.
BOARD OF EDUCATION OF THE TOWNSHIP OF PEMBERTON, BURLINGTON COUNTY,
Petitioner-Appellant,
v.
NEW JERSEY DEPARTMENT OF EDUCATION,
Respondent-Respondent.
BOARD OF EDUCATION OF THE TOWN OF PHILLIPSBURG, WARREN COUNTY,
Petitioner-Appellant,
v.
NEW JERSEY DEPARTMENT OF EDUCATION,
Respondent-Respondent.
BOARD OF EDUCATION OF THE TOWNSHIP OF NEPTUNE, MONMOUTH COUNTY,
Petitioner-Appellant,
v.
NEW JERSEY DEPARTMENT OF EDUCATION,
Respondent-Respondent.
Argued October 27, 2004 Decided May 19, 2005
On certification to the Superior Court, Appellate Division, whose opinion is reported at
367 N.J. Super. 417 (2004).
Richard E. Shapiro and Jennifer R. Webb-McRae argued the cause for appellants
(Mr. Shapiro, attorney for Board of Education of the Township of Pemberton, Board
of Education of the Town of Phillipsburg and Board of Education of the
Township of Neptune and Robinson & Andujar, attorneys for Board of Education of
the City of Millville, attorneys; Mr. Shapiro and Arnold Robinson, on the briefs).
Michelle L. Miller, Deputy Attorney General, argued the cause for respondent (Peter C.
Harvey, Attorney General of New Jersey, attorney; Nancy Kaplen, Assistant Attorney General, of
counsel; Allison Colsey Eck, Deputy Attorney General, on the briefs).
David G. Sciarra, Executive Director, Educational Law Center, argued the cause for amicus
curiae, Abbott v. Burke plaintiffs.
CHIEF JUSTICE PORITZ delivered the opinion of the Court.
In these consolidated cases certain Abbott districts
See footnote 1
raise the question whether the State
is legally obligated to fund with state appropriations the Districts preschool programs for
the 2003-2004 school year. More specifically, after the Department of Education (DOE or
Department) had approved the early childhood budgets submitted by the Boards of Education
of Phillipsburg, Millville, Pemberton, and Neptune (the Districts) for 2003-2004, the Districts were
advised that they would receive less than the entire approved amount from the
State. During the course of these proceedings, however, the Commissioner of the DOE
(Commissioner) has represented to the Court that any monies reallocated from other District
resources to make up the preschool program shortfalls will be replaced by the
DOE through supplemental funding unless the DOE can demonstrate that those monies are
not needed by the Districts. Based on that representation, we uphold the States
funding scheme. We caution, however, that this scheme is both
cumbersome and time-consuming and urge the DOE to implement a method of allocation
aligned in the first instance with the Districts approved budgets.
I.
A.
In
Abbott v. Burke,
153 N.J. 480, 508 (1998) (
Abbott V), this Court
required Abbott districts to provide half-day preschool programs for three- and four-year-old children,
and directed the Commissioner to ensure that such programs are adequately funded. Not
long after
Abbott V issued, however, plaintiffs returned to the Court complaining that
the Commissioner ha[d] repudiated his promise to provide [a] quality preschool education .
. . in the Abbott districts.
163 N.J. 95, 100 (2000) (
Abbott VI).
We sought in
Abbott VI to clarify our intent in respect of quality
preschool programming, including among other things, certain funding issues raised by plaintiffs.
Id.
at 104, 117-18. In response to plaintiffs concerns vis-à-vis adequate funding for preschool
facilities, we reaffirmed the approach taken in
Abbott V, repeating Justice Handlers direction
to the Commissioner to ensure resources and funding for Abbott district preschools by
the 1999-2000 school year.
Id. at 117 (quoting
Abbott V, 153
N.J. at
508).
Notwithstanding the direction provided in
Abbott VI, one year later the
Abbott plaintiffs
filed a second motion in aid of litigants rights, again requesting specific relief
as to a broad range of procedural and substantive issues related to the
implementation of preschool programs in the Abbott districts.
Abbott v. Burke,
170 N.J. 537, 540-41 (2002) (
Abbott VIII). Plaintiffs alleged in
Abbott VIII that the DOE
ha[d] imposed upon the districts pre-established, arbitrary per-student funding amounts that d[id] not
take into account real per-student costs.
Id. at 557. We held that
[d]istrict budgetary requests must be developed and articulated with specificity, and, equally important,
the DOE must respond with appropriate explanation. Formulaic decision-making neither assists the districts
nor provides a basis for further review on appeal.
[Id. at 559.]
We approved DOE instructions for district provider budget preparation focused on actual cost:
Districts should work with [preschool] providers to ensure that costs are reasonable and
appropriate and that sufficient justification for provider costs is incorporated into the district
plan. Providers are asked to construct a zero-based budget reflecting the actual cost
of delivering an early childhood education program meeting Abbott standards to Abbott children.
There is no predetermined per pupil amount, as allocations shall be based on
the unique needs of each provider and/or site.
[Ibid. (internal quotations and citation omitted).]
And, we ultimately concluded:
Whatever nomenclature is used to describe the budget calculation, it must yield funding
decisions based not on arbitrary, predetermined per-student amounts, but, rather, on a record
containing funding allocations developed after a thorough assessment of actual needs.
[Ibid.]
The Court anticipated that those requirements, if met, would result in DOE approved
Abbott district budgets based on a realistic assessment of an individual districts needs
in respect of quality full-day preschools for three- and four-year-old children.
Later in 2002 and in 2003 the DOE sought modification of the Courts
requirements. Those cases, in large part, were driven by the States budget crisis,
as well as a perceived need for greater flexibility in the implementation of
the [
Abbott v. Burke,
149 N.J. 145 (1997) (
Abbott IV)] and
Abbott V
remedial measures.
Abbott v. Burke,
172 N.J. 294, 295 (2002) (
Abbott IX); see
Abbott v. Burke,
177 N.J. 578 (2003) (
Abbott X);
Abbott v. Burke,
177 N.J. 596 (2003) (
Abbott XI). Most important, although the Court accepted the DOEs
proposal for a one-year
See footnote 2
cessation of further growth in funding of certain of
the
Abbott remedial measures,
Abbott IX, 172
N.J. at 295, it did so
on the DOE represent[ation] that parity funding[
See footnote 3
] . . . [would] be maintained,
and that pre-school programs for three- and four-year olds also [would] be maintained
and enhanced.
Id. at 296.
B.
In 1996, the Legislature passed the Comprehensive Educational Improvement and Financing Act (CEIFA),
N.J.S.A. 18A:7F-1 to -36, which governs academic standards and state funding for New
Jerseys system of free public schools. CEIFA provided a formula for calculation of
Early Childhood Program Aid (ECPA) that was to be distributed to all school
districts with high concentrations of low-income pupils, for the purpose of providing full-day
kindergarten and preschool classes and other early childhood programs and services.
N.J.S.A. 18A:7F-16a.
Because the State was unable to link the per-pupil amounts derived from the
ECPA formula to the actual costs of early childhood education, however, the Court
in
Abbott IV rejected the ECPA calculation as not demonstrably related to need.
149
N.J. at 180-86.
After our decision in
Abbott V, supplemental funding in the form of Additional
Abbott v. Burke State Aid was made available for preschool programming. Also, by
regulation, the Abbott districts were required to provide full-day preschool programs for all
three- and four-year-old children by the 2001-2002 school year.
N.J.A.C. 6A:24-3.3(a), -3.4(a). The
parties in this matter have represented to us that preschool programs in the
2001-2002 school year were supported by whatever resources were available to the Districts,
and that when sufficient resources were not available the Districts applied for supplemental
funding.
As mentioned above, due to a state budget crisis, in 2002 the DOE
sought and obtained limitations on supplemental funding for the Abbott districts. The DOE
committed to continued growth and improvement in early childhood programs during the maintenance
budget period, however, and the Legislature established a state aid category denominated Preschool
Expansion Aid (PSEA) specifically to fund the cost of preschool expansion.
See FY03
Appropriations Act,
L. 2002,
c. 38 (The amount appropriated hereinabove as Abbott Preschool
Expansion Aid is for the purpose of funding the increase in the approved
budgeted costs from 2001-2002 to 2002-2003 for the projected expansion of preschool programs
in Abbott districts.). Thus, during that period, the Abbott districts continued to receive
both ECPA funding in amounts determined by a statutory formula based on a
modified tally of a Districts total enrollment,
N.J.S.A. 18A:7F-16, and PSEA awards based
on the difference between the Districts approved preschool operating plans for the current
fiscal year and the cost of preschool programs for the 2001-2002 school year.
FY03 Appropriations Act,
L. 2002,
c. 38. The FY03 Appropriations Act provided $142.4
million in PSEA funding.
Ibid.
When the Court permitted the DOE to extend the maintenance budget for another
school year (2003-2004), the commitment to expand early childhood programs remained in place.
The ECPA formula was not changed, but, for FY04, PSEA awards were calculated
by subtracting the 2001-2002 approved budget cost for preschool programs from the 2003-2004
approved cost. The disputes in the appeals now before us arise from the
difference between state funding for preschool, which represents the sum of the ECPA
and PSEA awards, and the approved budgets for the 2003-2004 preschool plans in
each of the four Abbott districts. Those differences were $835,034 for Phillipsburg, $424,569
for Pemberton, $1,763,866 for Millville, and $3,768,176 for Neptune.
Millville Bd. of Educ.
v. New Jersey Dept of Educ.,
367 N.J. Super. 417, 420 (App. Div.
2004).
II.
The parties agree that after negotiation and the resolution of a prior appeal,
the Phillipsburg preschool program budget for the 2003-2004 school year was approved by
the DOE in mid-March 2003 at a total cost of $3,590,720. Based on
the approved budget, the DOE established the Districts PSEA for FY04 as $1,011,775.
When the ECPA amount, set by statutory formula at $1,743,911, was added to
the PSEA award and the total was offset against the $3,590,720 approved budget,
Phillipsburg was short $835,034 in its preschool account.
Bd. of Educ. of Phillipsburg
v. New Jersey Dept of Educ.,
OAL Dkt. No. EDU3423-03, slip op.
at 3-4 (Office of Administrative Law Initial Decision, May 21, 2003).
Phillipsburg appealed the Departments funding decision to the Commissioner on March 27, 2003,
and on April 4, 2003, the Commissioner transmitted the matter to the Office
of Administrative Law (OAL) for hearing as a contested case.
Id. at 2.
The matter was decided in the OAL on cross-motions for summary decision and
a joint stipulation of facts.
Id. at 3. In that proceeding, the DOE
asserted that the State was not legally obligated to provide full funding for
Phillipsburgs preschool program which, in the Departments view, could be derived from a
combination of sources including, where applicable, local tax share.
Id. at 2.
The Administrative Law Judge (ALJ) disagreed. He concluded that the DOE should arrange
for full state funding of Phillipsburgs approved preschool program for FY 2004.
Id.
at 4. His inquiry focused on the Courts
Abbott opinions, legislative intent, and
the DOEs understanding of its responsibility to fund preschool. He acknowledged that in
Abbott V the Court stopped short of declaring a constitutional mandate for preschool
education programs,
id. at 6, but found in our opinion a recognition of
the critical nature of quality early childhood education and an endorsement of the
Commissioners promise to provide or secure funding if needed.
Id. at 5. In
respect of guidance from the Legislature, he pointed to the language of the
Governors Budget Message for FY04 (Budget Message) as reflective of an intent to
fund preschool in the Abbott districts entirely with state appropriations:
The amount appropriated hereinabove for Additional Abbott v. Burke State Aid will provide
additional resources to Abbott districts to meet the States obligation to fully fund
parity and the approved early childhood operational plans. The remaining funds appropriated will
be used for the award of discretionary funding to Abbott districts to maintain
the programs, services and positions from the prior year that the commissioner determines
are essential to the provision of a thorough and efficient education in those
districts.
[Id. at 6 (quoting Budget Message and adding emphasis).]
This statement, in the ALJs view, evidenced the States recognition of its obligation
in respect of preschool operations.
Ibid. Finally, the ALJ relied on the Departments
communications to the Abbott districts wherein staff had assured the Districts that the
State would fully fund approved programs.
Id. at 7. Based on
Abbott V,
the Budget Message language, and DOE staff assurances to the Districts, the ALJ
determined that the State was required to fund approved preschool programs in their
entirety.
Id. at 6-7.
The Boards of Education of Millville, Pemberton, and Neptune also challenged the adequacy
of their combined EPCA and PSEA awards. Those Districts claimed shortfalls of $1,763,866,
$424,569, and $3,768,176, respectively. After the Initial Decision in
Phillipsburg,
supra, issued however,
the parties in the Millville, Pemberton, and Neptune cases agreed to proceed by
stipulating to essential facts and by relying on the arguments advanced in their
briefs. The ALJs handling those cases subsequently granted the Districts motions for summary
decision, concurring with the determination in
Phillipsburg,
supra.
Bd. of Educ. of Millville
v. New Jersey Dept of Educ.,
OAL Dkt. No. EDU379-03, slip op.
at 3 (Office of Administrative Law Initial Decision, Sept. 5, 2003);
Bd. of
Educ. of Pemberton v. New Jersey Dept of Educ., OAL Dkt. No. EDU
2203-03, slip op. at 4 (Office of Administrative Law Initial Decision, July 30,
2003);
Bd. of Educ. of Neptune v. New Jersey Dept of Educ., OAL
Dkt. No. EDU 2202-03, slip op. at 4 (Office of Administrative Law Initial
Decision, July 2, 2003).
On September 25, 2003, the Commissioner issued his decision in
Phillipsburg.
Bd. of
Educ. of Phillipsburg v. New Jersey Dept of Educ., OAL Dkt. No. EDU
3423-03, slip op. at 18 (Commissioner of Education, Sept. 25, 2003). The Commissioner
rejected the ALJs conclusion that the State was required to fund
Abbott preschool
programs in their entirety regardless of the availability of other funds in the
District budget.
Id. at 16-18. He observed that after the ALJ issued his
Initial Decision, the Legislature passed and the Governor signed the Appropriations Act for
Fiscal Year 2004 (FY04 Appropriations Act),
L. 2003,
c. 122. The language in
the Budget Message had been altered prior to passage and now read: The
amount appropriated . . . for Additional
Abbott v. Burke State Aid will
provide additional resources to
Abbott districts to meet the States obligation to fully
fund parity and approved Abbott preschool expansion. FY04 Appropriations Act,
L. 2003,
c.
122. Along the way to the vote on the budget the express intent
to provide full funding for approved early childhood operational plans had been converted
to approved
Abbott preschool expansion. Relying in part on that language change as
evidence of a legislative purpose only to fund preschool expansion from state appropriations,
the Commissioner rejected the notion that all approved early childhood plans must be
funded exclusively through state aid.
Phillipsburg,
supra,
OAL Dkt. No. EDU3423-03, slip
op. at 17-18 (Commissioner). The Commissioner further concluded that none of the judicial
or legislative directives regarding preschool programs required full State funding regardless of a
districts available resources.
Id. at 16. Rather, the States obligation is
to ensure, with additional aid if necessary, that sufficient funds are available to
the district to fully fund its preschool program, that is, to ensure that
any gap remaining after receipt of statutory formula aids will be addressed by
the State to the extent that need exists because funds otherwise available to
the district are insufficient to fully support the approved program.
[Id. at 16-17.]
On the same day that the decision in
Phillipsburg,
supra, issued (September 25,
2003), the Commissioner also decided the Millville, Pemberton, and Neptune appeals, ruling similarly
in all three cases: that the State is not required fully to fund
early childhood education in the Abbott districts; rather, the DOE may ask the
Districts to reallocate monies designated for other approved District programs but not needed
to support those programs.
Bd. of Educ. of Millville v. New Jersey Dept
of Educ.,
OAL Dkt. No. EDU379-03, slip op. at 10-11 (Commissioner of
Education, Sept. 25, 2003);
Bd. of Educ. of Pemberton v. New Jersey Dept
of Educ.,
OAL Dkt. No. EDU2203-03, slip op. at 18 (Commissioner of
Education, Sept. 25, 2003);
Bd. of Educ. of Neptune v. New Jersey Dept
of Educ.,
OAL Dkt. No. EDU2202-03, slip op. at 17 (Commissioner of
Education, Sept. 25, 2003).
The four Abbott districts appealed the Commissioners decisions to the Appellate Division where
the cases were consolidated by Order dated December 9, 2003. On March 12,
2004, the Appellate Division agreed with the Commissioners determination that the Supreme Court
has only directed [him to] ensure that there be adequate funding for these
programs, thus permitting the utilization of local district funds.
Millville,
supra, 367
N.J.
Super. at 424.
Based on its interpretation of the
Abbott decisions and the FY04 Appropriations Act,
the Appellate Division concluded that the State is not exclusively responsible for funding
preschool programs in the Abbott districts.
Id. at 419. On careful consideration of
Abbott IV and
Abbott V, the panel found
that the adoption of whole-school reform, with its inclusion of preschool education in
the Abbott districts, was designed by the Court as a remedy for the
past constitutional deprivation of a thorough and efficient education for children between the
ages of five and eighteen in the Abbott districts. In so recognizing the
nature of Abbott Vs mandate, and in comparing that mandate with others rendered
by the Court in this context, [the panel] also [found] that the Court
did not intend to require exclusive state funding of preschool in the Abbott
districts.
[Id. at 424.]
In support of its determination, the panel cited
Abbott V, observing that the
Court has chosen quite emphatic language when exclusive State funding was intended, whereas
in respect of preschool the Court simply imposed an obligation on the Commissioner
to ensure that such funding is provided.
Id. at 424-25.
The Appellate Division also agreed with the Commissioner that the FY04 Appropriations Act
eliminated any promise found in the Budget Message to fully fund . .
.
the approved early childhood operational plans, and replaced it with a limited
commitment only to fund
approved Abbott preschool expansion with state appropriations.
Id. at
426 (quoting Budget Message) (emphasis added by the Appellate Division). Having concluded that
neither the Supreme Court nor the Legislature had mandated exclusive State funding of
preschool programs in the Abbott districts, the Appellate Division affirmed the Commissioner and
held that local resources, if available, may be allocated for such purposes.
Id.
at 427. On March 22, 2004, the Districts petitioned this Court for certification
of their consolidated appeals, which the Court granted on June 4, 2004.
180 N.J. 454.
III.
A.
The Districts advance two arguments in support of their contention that the
State must fully fund approved preschool programs and that other district resources cannot
be reallocated for that purpose. First, the Districts claim that the Appellate Divisions
decision conflicts with this Courts preschool mandates as set forth in its
Abbott
decisions, and second, they claim that the Appellate Divisions decision undermines the Legislatures
intent and direction in the FY03 Appropriations Act to provide full funding for
preschool programs. We reject both claims, largely for the reasons expressed in Judge
Fishers Appellate Division opinion. In respect of the FY04 Appropriations Act it is
clear from the enacted language that the Legislature intended PSEA awards to fund
approved preschool expansion only.
See Millville,
supra, 367
N.J. Super. at 426-27. Nothing
more can be added on this subject. In respect of this Courts preschool
mandates, we add only the following.
As the Appellate Division recognized,
Abbott V accepted in substantial part the Commissioners
proposal for whole school reform, including preschool programming recommended by the education experts
and endorsed by the Commissioner. 153
N.J. at 489-90. Although the implementation of
whole school reform was the core constitutional remedy
See footnote 4
mandated by the Court, early
childhood education was incorporated into that remedy in recognition of its critical importance
and its statutory underpinnings.
Id. at 506-08;
N.J.S.A. 18A:7F-16. As to funding, in
Abbott II, and then in
Abbott IV, the State had been required to
provide the Abbott districts with state aid (above the amount generated by the
local tax levy) for the per-pupil costs of kindergarten through twelfth grade at
a level commensurate with the average per-pupil expenditures in the States wealthiest districts
(the parity remedy).
Abbott II, 119
N.J. at 385;
Abbott IV, 149
N.J.
at 189. Yet, in
Abbott V, the Court also recognized that additional monies
might be needed for supplemental programs, including social services, security, technology education, and
other school-specific programs. 153
N.J. at 512, 514, 517. On decisions related to
that additional funding, we said:
Not only must sufficient funds be provided for whole-school reform and for the
additional or modified supplemental programs that are constituent parts of such reform, there
must also be in place a clear and effective funding protocol. Consistent with
zero-based budgeting, the Commissioner may, before seeking new appropriations, first determine whether funds
within an existing school budget are sufficient to meet a schools request for
a demonstrably needed supplemental program. Implicit in any determination that existing appropriations are
sufficient is the condition that funds may not be withdrawn from or reallocated
within the whole-school budget if that will undermine or weaken either the schools
foundational education program or already existing supplemental programs.
Underlying the Commissioners proposal for whole school reform, early childhood programs, and supplemental
programs, is a clear commitment that if there is a need for
additional funds, the needed funds will be provided or secured.[
See footnote 5
]
[Id. at 518.]
On the question of funding for half-day preschool for three- and four-year olds,
we explained more particularly that the Commissioner must ensure that such programs are
adequately funded and assist the schools in meeting the need for transportation and
other services, support, and resources related to such programs.
Id. at 508.
A requirement that the Commissioner
ensure adequate funding is not the same as
a requirement that the Commissioner
provide that funding. The question, then, is whether
the Commissioners approach to funding Abbott district preschool programs ensures that the Districts
have what they need to provide a quality early childhood education for three-
and four-year olds. The Districts point out that the funding formulas used to
calculate both ECPA and PSEA awards result in amounts that are not aligned
with the Districts actual approved budgets. As a consequence, some districts receive more
than the approved budget amounts and other districts, such as Phillipsburg, Millville, Pemberton,
and Neptune, receive less than the approved amounts. On its face, that approach
appears to make no sense -- those districts that have received state aid
in excess of their needs will be required to return that excess to
the State, whereas districts with shortfalls will have to reallocate monies from other
approved district programs to fund preschools.
Yet, in his Final Decision in these cases the Commissioner expressly and clearly
accepted the responsibility
to ensure, with additional aid if necessary, that sufficient funds are available to
the district to fully fund its preschool program, that is, to ensure that
any gap remaining after receipt of statutory formula aids will be addressed by
the State to the extent that need exists because funds otherwise available to
the district are insufficient to fully support the approved program.
[Phillipsburg, supra,
OAL Dkt. No. EDU3423-03, slip op. at 17-18 (Commissioner).]
At oral argument, counsel for the DOE reaffirmed the Commissioners responsibility to restore
any Abbott district shortfalls unless the Commissioner is able to demonstrate that additional
funding is unnecessary because the district has sufficient resources to cover all of
its programming needs.
It matters little whether the monies initially reallocated by the districts are drawn
from formula aids, local levies, or savings realized through efficiencies. Indeed, in the
Courts discussion regarding sources of funding for supplemental programs in Abbott V, we
determined that the Commissioner could look to the existing school budget in the
first instance so long as reallocation would not undermine or weaken either the
schools foundational education program or already existing supplemental programs. 153 N.J. at 518.
The preschool funding mechanisms challenged by Phillipsburg, Millville, Pemberton, and Neptune essentially track
that approach.
B.
We make one other observation about the Commissioners approach to funding preschool programs
in the Abbott districts. In
Abbott VIII, as described above, the
Abbott plaintiffs
sought certain specific relief relating to early childhood education. They claimed then that
the Commissioner ha[d, among other things,] failed to comply with the Courts funding
mandate in
Abbott V, and . . .
Abbott VI. 170
N.J. at
540. At that time it appeared that neither the districts nor the DOE
had properly evaluated the districts preschool needs prior to or during the initial
budget approval process.
Id. at 556-58. We required the Commissioner to implement protocols
for developing budgets based not on arbitrary, predetermined per-student amounts, but, rather, on
a record containing funding allocations developed after a thorough assessment of actual needs.
Id. at 559;
see supra, slip op. at 6.
In an audit conducted by the Office of the State Auditor covering the
Early Childhood Education Program during the period July 1, 2001 to February 28,
2003, the State Auditor reported that because of inadequate reporting, the actual costs
of preschool programs could not be determined. Office of the State Auditor, Audit
of the DOE Early Childhood Education Program 5,
available at http://www.njleg.state.nj.us/legislativepub/
auditor/34052state.pdf. The Auditor also found that the enrollment projections used by the districts
to formulate preschool budgets were overstated (by nineteen percent in 2001-2002 and ten
percent in 2002-2003).
Id. at 6. The DOE response to the Auditors Report
indicated that a procedure for reporting actual preschool program costs by the Abbott
districts for comparison to budgeted amounts [had] already [been] established.
Id. at 7.
The parties have not suggested to the Court that their approved early childhood
budgets are based on anything other than need, and so we have assumed
that our direction in
Abbott VIII has been followed and that the State
Auditors recommended controls are in place. The issue before us is simply whether
Abbott district approved preschool budgets can be formula-funded up front with any shortfalls
addressed during the school year through additional funding unless the Commissioner can demonstrate
that monies not needed for other programs are available to the districts. Certainly,
if the DOE by audit finds that a district has over-projected its preschool
enrollment such that its DOE-approved early childhood funding exceeds the districts actual need,
it may be the case that the preschool program, in fact, is not
underfunded.
See Bd. of Educ. of the City of Passaic v. New Jersey
Dept of Educ., ___
N.J. ___ (2005) (slip op. at 3-4) (discussing over-projection
of student enrollment in City of Passaic preschool program). We emphasize that in
respect of any reallocation of resources by the district to cover the cost
of shortfalls created by formula-driven funding, the burden is on the Commissioner to
prove that the reallocation will not compromise any of the districts educational programs.
See N.J.A.C. 6A:24-7.1(b), (c).
IV.
Because this matter was decided below on the global issue, that is, whether
the Commissioner is required to provide full funding for preschool programs in the
first instance, the record does not contain any information about the provision of
additional aid to the districts with shortfalls, and the parties were unable to
respond when we sought that information at oral argument. It is of some
interest that the DOE argued before the OAL and the Commissioner that these
matters were not ripe for adjudication because decisions about additional aid had not
yet been made. The argument was rejected, however, and the matter proceeded on
the global issue. We nonetheless uphold the States funding scheme based on the
Commissioners commitment to address any shortfalls during the school year unless he can
demonstrate that district funds not needed for other programs are available.
V.
The decision of the Appellate Division is affirmed.
JUSTICES LONG, LaVECCHIA, ALBIN, WALLACE, and RIVERA-SOTO and Appellate Division JUDGE STERN (t/a)
join in CHIEF JUSTICE PORITZs opinion. JUSTICE ZAZZALI did not participate.
SUPREME COURT OF NEW JERSEY
NO. A-4 SEPTEMBER TERM 2004
ON CERTIFICATION TO Appellate Division, Superior Court
BOARD OF EDUCATION OF THE
CITY OF MILLVILLE, CUMBERLAND
COUNTY,
Petitioner-Appellant,
v.
NEW JERSEY DEPARTMENT OF
EDUCATION,
Respondent-Respondent.
DECIDED May 19, 2005
Chief Justice Poritz PRESIDING
OPINION BY Chief Justice Poritz
CONCURRING/DISSENTING OPINIONS BY
DISSENTING OPINION BY
CHECKLIST
AFFIRM
CHIEF JUSTICE PORITZ
X
JUSTICE LONG
X
JUSTICE LaVECCHIA
X
JUSTICE ZAZZALI
------------------
--------------
---------
JUSTICE ALBIN
X
JUSTICE WALLACE
X
JUSTICE RIVERA-SOTO
X
JUDGE STERN (t/a)
X
TOTALS
7
Footnote: 1
See Abbott v. Burke,
119 N.J. 287, 334-57 (1990) (Abbott II), for
a description of the genesis and development of the States classification of school
districts and the bases on which the Court concluded that the Abbott remedies
would apply to a designated number of poor urban districts with special needs.
Abbott v. Burke,
164 N.J. 84, 88-89 (2000) (Abbott VII).
Footnote: 2
Abbott XI, 177 N.J. at 598, extended by one additional year the relaxation
of remedies permitted in Abbott IX.
Footnote: 3
Parity funding refers to the Courts remedy in Abbott II, 119 N.J. at
385, which required the Legislature to assure that poorer urban districts educational funding
is substantially equal to that of property rich districts. In Abbott IV parity
was established as the amount required to increase the per-pupil regular education expenditures
in the Abbott districts to the level of the average per-pupil regular education
expenditures of District Factor Groups I and J Districts, the wealthiest districts in
New Jersey. 149 N.J. at 189-98. Aid distributed to achieve parity was designated
as Abbott v. Burke Parity Remedy Aid, see Appropriations Act for Fiscal Year
2003, L. 2002, c. 38 (FY03 Appropriations Act); such aid is now combined
with Additional Abbott v. Burke State Aid and designated Education Opportunity Aid. Appropriations
Act for Fiscal Year 2005, L. 2004, c. 71.
Footnote: 4
The constitutional remedies found in the Abbott cases are rooted in Article VIII,
Section 4, Paragraph 1 of the New Jersey Constitution:
The Legislature shall provide for the maintenance and support of a thorough and
efficient system of free public schools for the instruction of all the children
in the State between the ages of five and eighteen years.
Footnote: 5
The principle that if there is a need for additional funds, [they] will
be provided or secured would apply regardless of whether the budget is school-based
or district-wide.