July 1, 2026

Belleville Resident Sues School Board, Seeks to Void Nearly 200 Layoffs Over Closed-Door Meeting Claims

A Belleville resident has filed a lawsuit seeking to overturn nearly 200 school layoffs, alleging the Board of Education intentionally moved a controversial meeting to a cramped venue to discourage public participation and violate New Jersey’s Open Public Meetings Act.

BELLEVILLE, N.J. — A Belleville resident has filed a lawsuit against the Belleville Board of Education seeking to invalidate nearly 200 staff layoffs, alleging school officials deliberately relocated a highly anticipated public meeting to a small elementary school to suppress public attendance and shield the board from community opposition.

The complaint, filed in Essex County Superior Court by resident Michael Sheldon, argues the board violated New Jersey’s Open Public Meetings Act by moving its May 20 meeting from Belleville High School’s auditorium to a much smaller room at School No. 10 just days after issuing approximately 200 reduction-in-force notices to district employees.

Lawsuit alleges venue change suppressed public participation

According to the complaint, the Board of Education adopted its annual meeting schedule earlier this year using the Belleville High School auditorium, which the lawsuit says can accommodate approximately 1,000 people and includes modern audio-visual equipment funded through a $48.5 million voter-approved referendum.

The lawsuit alleges that after approximately 200 employees received layoff notices on May 11, the board changed the May 20 meeting location four days later to School No. 10, which the complaint describes as the district’s smallest elementary school meeting space.

Sheldon contends the smaller venue lacked adequate air conditioning during a heat wave, provided virtually no public parking, and quickly reached capacity, leaving members of the public unable to adequately observe or participate in the meeting.

The complaint further alleges the board added a library dedication ceremony to the agenda to justify the venue change, despite such ceremonies typically occurring outside regular board meetings.

Plaintiff claims Open Public Meetings Act violations

The lawsuit argues the venue change amounted to a “constructive closure” of the public meeting, violating New Jersey’s Open Public Meetings Act, which requires public bodies to conduct meetings openly and provide meaningful public access.

According to the filing, Sheldon warned board members during the May 20 public comment period that he intended to challenge any actions taken at the meeting in court because of the alleged violations.

The complaint seeks to void all actions approved during that meeting, including the authorization of approximately 200 staff reductions, and asks the court to prohibit the board from holding future meetings concerning major personnel matters in venues that cannot reasonably accommodate expected public attendance.

OPRA dispute and conflict allegations included

The complaint also alleges the board failed to timely respond to an Open Public Records Act request seeking internal communications about the venue change.

Sheldon claims the board requested additional time to produce records but failed to meet its extended deadline, alleging the delay was intended to run out the statutory deadline for filing his lawsuit.

In addition, the complaint raises allegations concerning Superintendent Dr. Erick Alfonso and Board President Esteban Leon. According to the lawsuit, Leon publicly acknowledged Alfonso serves as his professor in a graduate educational leadership program, which Sheldon alleges creates a conflict affecting the board’s independent oversight of the superintendent.

The lawsuit also references the superintendent’s employment contract and compensation, alleging they demonstrate an unusually close relationship between district leadership. Those allegations have not been proven in court.

Board has not yet responded

Sheldon is representing himself in the litigation and has asked the court to declare the May 20 meeting unlawful, invalidate all votes taken that evening, compel production of requested records, and prevent implementation of the layoffs while the case is pending.

As with all civil complaints, the allegations represent the plaintiff’s claims. The Belleville Board of Education has not yet filed a response, and the allegations have not been adjudicated by the court.

Key Points

  • A Belleville resident is seeking to overturn approximately 200 school layoffs through a lawsuit alleging violations of New Jersey’s Open Public Meetings Act.
  • The complaint claims the Board of Education intentionally moved a controversial meeting to a smaller venue to discourage public participation.
  • The Belleville Board of Education has not yet responded to the lawsuit, and the allegations remain unproven.

Related: Belleville, Belleville Board of Education, Open Public Meetings Act, Open Public Records Act, Essex County Superior Court, Michael Sheldon