TRENTON, N.J. – A sweeping proposal to overhaul how New Jersey’s charter schools manage admissions, student transfers, and athletic participation cleared the Senate Budget and Appropriations Committee this week, setting the stage for one of the most significant updates to the state’s charter school law in decades.
Senate Bill 4716, approved with committee amendments on January 8, would modify the “Charter School Program Act of 1995” by imposing new requirements intended to increase transparency, strengthen accountability, and ensure equitable student access.
The measure directs each public school, including charter schools, to designate a staff member as a student placement liaison responsible for coordinating transfers, maintaining enrollment records, and ensuring state aid follows students appropriately. Charter schools would also be required, whenever possible, to conduct exit interviews with students who leave before graduation to determine the reasons for their departure.
Under the bill, charter schools would be prohibited from establishing enrollment criteria that favor certain applicants or from imposing qualifications beyond a random selection process when demand exceeds capacity. Schools would also be barred from counseling or advising students to withdraw, a practice critics have said can distort enrollment data and reduce support for high-needs students. The measure, however, allows child study teams to recommend alternate placements for students with disabilities when appropriate under state and federal law.
Charter schools would have to report annually to the Commissioner of Education the number of students who exited during the prior year, along with non-identifying data such as last attendance dates, reasons for withdrawal, and subsequent educational placement.
The bill also addresses athletics by requiring charter schools that offer interscholastic sports to join a voluntary organization such as the New Jersey State Interscholastic Athletic Association (NJSIAA) and to abide by its rules. Those rules would become binding school policy, with appeals of association decisions proceeding through the Department of Education or Superior Court. Non-resident charter school students would need to meet specific eligibility standards to participate in athletics unless granted a waiver by the commissioner when their home district does not offer the sport.
Committee amendments clarified definitions, removed several provisions requiring commissioner approval for non-resident enrollment, and eliminated new qualification standards for student placement liaisons. They also affirmed that students enrolled in a charter school in the previous year may remain unless the next grade level is not offered.
Lawmakers did not attach a fiscal note to the measure, and its financial impact remains undetermined.