Piscataway, NJ — New Jersey’s Office of the State Comptroller has found widespread violations of public contracting laws by the Educational Services Commission of New Jersey (ESCNJ), warning the agency to halt certain contracts and overhaul its procurement practices after repeated failures to comply with state rules.
In a formal letter issued in January, the Comptroller said ESCNJ “failed to comply with applicable public contracting laws, rules, and regulations in numerous respects” and has been unable to produce an acceptable corrective action plan despite months of guidance and warnings.
The findings center on contracts tied to custodial supplies and modular building services—procurements valued at $15.2 million or more.
State orders halt to contract extensions
The Comptroller directed ESCNJ not to renew or extend the contracts once current extensions expire March 31, 2026, and barred the agency from issuing similar solicitations until it fully complies with state law.
Officials also warned ESCNJ cannot proceed with any future contracts of that size without proper notice, review, and approval.
The directive follows multiple instances where ESCNJ extended contracts without notifying the state, despite legal requirements to do so.
Core violations detailed in report
State investigators identified several major compliance failures, including:
- Not defining its own specific needs in contract solicitations
- Failing to include estimated demand from participating school districts
- Not outlining how vendors would be selected as the lowest responsible bidder
- Attempting to award multiple contracts through a single low-bid process
- Extending contracts beyond legal limits without proper oversight
The Comptroller concluded these practices violated both the Public School Contracts Law and state oversight statutes.
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Key Points
• NJ Comptroller finds major contracting violations by ESCNJ
• Contracts worth $15.2M+ ordered to halt or be reworked
• Agency failed to follow bidding rules and ignored compliance directives
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Pattern of non-compliance spans years
The letter outlines a long-running pattern of issues. Since at least 2017, ESCNJ has been warned about failing to properly report and structure contracts.
A 2024 audit found the agency also failed to submit required contract notices and accumulated nearly $70 million in surplus funds, partly from vendor fees tied to its cooperative purchasing system.
Despite repeated meetings, guidance, and deadlines, the Comptroller said ESCNJ continued to submit non-compliant documents and even extended contracts while under review.
Tensions over oversight authority
At one point, ESCNJ argued that its role as a cooperative purchasing leader should allow flexibility in how it structures contracts. State officials rejected that position, saying all entities must follow the same procurement laws regardless of mission.
The Comptroller emphasized that cooperative contracts must clearly define both the agency’s needs and those of participating members—requirements ESCNJ repeatedly failed to meet.
What happens next
ESCNJ must now revise its procurement processes and bring all future contracts into compliance before seeking approval. The state has closed dozens of additional contract reviews tied to similar issues while warning they remain subject to the same findings.
The matter remains under state oversight, with no indication yet whether additional enforcement actions or penalties will follow.