NJ Republican Renews School Funding Fight, Questions Why Camden Gets $55K Per Student While Toms River Gets $2K

TRENTON, N.J. — New Jersey’s long-running battle over school funding formulas reignited this week after Assemblyman Alex Sauickie posted a graphic comparing state aid between some of the state’s highest-funded and lowest-funded school districts — highlighting stark differences that continue fueling suburban frustration.

The Republican lawmaker argued the state’s current funding structure unfairly leaves districts like Toms River, Jackson, Lacey, Middletown, and Old Bridge receiving only a fraction of the per-student state aid directed to urban districts such as Camden and Newark.

“When you break school funding down per student, the inequity becomes impossible to ignore,” Sauickie wrote in a social media post shared Wednesday.

The graphic claimed Camden receives more than $55,000 per student in funding, while Newark receives roughly $31,600. By comparison, Toms River was listed at approximately $2,200 per student in state aid, with Lacey, Jefferson, and Middletown all near or below that level.

School Funding Debate Remains One of NJ’s Most Explosive Issues

The funding disparities stem largely from New Jersey’s school aid formula and decades of court rulings tied to the state’s former Abbott districts — now known as School Development Authority districts — which receive elevated levels of aid because of concentrated poverty, infrastructure needs, and educational inequities.

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Supporters of the current model argue high-poverty districts require substantially more funding for special education services, multilingual learners, transportation, school security, and student support programs.

Critics, particularly in suburban and shore communities, argue middle-class taxpayers are increasingly subsidizing systems that leave their own districts underfunded despite rising enrollment pressures and property taxes.

Sauickie called for what he described as a “fair, student-based funding formula.”

“That formula is fair. That formula is needed. And that formula is coming,” the assemblyman wrote.

Shore Districts Have Warned of Budget Struggles

The issue resonates particularly strongly in Ocean and Monmouth counties, where several districts have repeatedly warned about cuts, staffing pressures, and tax strain tied to state aid reductions and enrollment shifts.

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Toms River Regional Schools, one of New Jersey’s largest districts, has spent years warning about structural budget problems connected to state funding changes under the School Funding Reform Act and subsequent adjustments.

Local officials in districts receiving lower aid levels often argue residents pay high property taxes while receiving comparatively little state support.

Meanwhile, education advocates caution that direct dollar-per-student comparisons can oversimplify funding realities because urban districts often face significantly higher concentrations of poverty, special education costs, aging infrastructure, and student support needs.


Key Points

• Assemblyman Alex Sauickie criticized New Jersey’s school funding disparities in a new social media post
• The graphic compared districts like Camden and Newark with lower-aid districts including Toms River and Lacey
• The debate reflects ongoing political fights over fairness, taxes, and educational equity in New Jersey


Political Pressure Building Ahead of Future Budget Battles

School funding remains one of the most politically sensitive issues in New Jersey, where education spending consistently represents the largest portion of the state budget.

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Republicans and suburban advocacy groups have increasingly pushed for revisions that would guarantee stronger baseline aid levels for all districts regardless of location.

Democrats and education equity advocates argue reducing aid to historically underserved communities could reverse decades of progress ordered by state courts.

The debate is likely to intensify as districts across the state prepare future budgets amid rising operational costs, inflation pressures, and continued enrollment changes.

Sauickie’s post quickly circulated among New Jersey political and education circles, tapping into growing frustration in many suburban communities that believe they contribute heavily to the state tax base while receiving disproportionately low education aid in return.

Whether lawmakers revisit the broader funding formula remains uncertain, but the issue continues exposing one of the deepest divides in New Jersey politics: how to balance educational equity with taxpayer demands for geographic fairness.

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