About 400 Newark public high school students walked out of classes around the city on Tuesday to protest cuts to the city's education budget.

 

 

Protesting students in Newark
Protesting students in Newark (Twitter)
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The Newark Student Union staged a noisy protest outside Rutgers law school in Newark, where the Assembly Budget Committee was holding a daylong hearing on Gov. Chris Christie's proposed education budget.

The Star Ledger estimates 1,000 students walked out of class.

The students are seeking restoration of a $56 million cut to the city's school budget, which they say unfairly targets urban students. The state oversees Newark's education budget because city schools are under state control.

The students also sought to highlight the fact that the governor's $32.9 billion budget again fails to fully fund the state's own school aid formula.

"For the last three years, Gov. Christie has waged a concerted attack on Newark students," said organizer Jaysen Bazile. "He keeps saying that he's given New Jersey schools unprecedented levels of support, but what he doesn't say is that his hand was forced by the Supreme Court after they found his first-year cuts violated our constitutional rights to a thorough and efficient education."

The students, from at least six of the city's public high schools, said the lack of education funding can be seen in nearly every aspect of school life: classrooms with holes in walls, teacher layoffs, aging technology and cuts to extracurricular activities like sports and debate club. They said Newark would be entitled to an additional $51 million if the funding formula was honored at 100 percent.

The students staged a similar walkout in 2010, but "nothing changed," according to Thais Marques and Angel Plaz, two students selected to speak at the budget hearing.

Earlier, a court-appointed child advocate also took aim at education underfunding, saying 35,000 children in New Jersey who are eligible for state-funded preschool are not enrolled because the state doesn't follow the funding formula. Cynthia Rice of Advocates for Children of New Jersey said the school funding formula calls for eligible 3- and 4-year-olds to attend preschools. Fully funding the initiative would cost about $300 million.

Five faculty and staff representatives at Rutgers-Newark also complained about the proposed budget, saying their campus is being shortchanged.

Assemblyman Albert Coutinho, a Democrat who represents Newark and sits on the panel, said he's concerned that the Newark and Camden campuses of Rutgers still do not have fiscal autonomy from the flagship campus in New Brunswick. He said the higher education merger enacted last year specifies that each campus is to have a separate budget, but noted that the merger has not yet been completed.

The Legislature and Christie must agree on a budget by July 1, the start of the new fiscal year.

(Copyright 2013 The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved)

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