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State Denies Application for new Charter School in Hoboken

The proposed Da Vinci School didn't get its charter from the state and will not be allowed to open in the Fall of 2013.

 

The Christie Administration has denied the application for a new science-based charter school in Hoboken, according to a press release from the New Jersey Department of Education.

A group of parents worked on the Da Vinci School application for about a year, making it through three rounds of the process before it was shot down by Governor Chris Christie Tuesday.

"All we can say is that we're disappointed," said Laura Siegel, one of the ten founding parents of the proposed school.

In two weeks, Siegel said, the Da Vinci board will get more information about why the charter was denied. Until then, she said, it's too soon to determine the next step.

Whether or not the team will continue to try to open a fourth charter school in Hoboken will depend on the feedback they receive, Siegel said. 

"We were surprised," Siegel said. But, she added, "we know it's an extremely competitive process."

Charter schools are public, but students are admitted by way of a lottery. The schools are run privately, and are—besides tests and other state wide requirements—independent from the local Board of Education.

In May, the Hoboken Board of Education opposed the creation of a new charter school, stating that it would not be in the best interest of the district's current students to add another charter.

The Christie administration approved two applications this round, according to the press release.

"We are deeply committed to ensuring that every student in New Jersey has access to a high-quality public school that is a good fit for them, and we strongly support charter schools as one public school option for underserved students," said Education Commissioner Chris Cerf in the press release. "By holding a high bar for any new school we approve, we are following through on our commitment to ensuring that we not only provide options for students, but that we provide high-quality options for students."

The New Jersey Department of Education approved the International Academy of Camden Charter School and the Philip's Academy Charter School in the Newark, East Orange, and Irvington districts.

In Hoboken, said Superintendent Dr. Mark Toback, the addition of another charter school would have been an "enormous strain on the district."

"At one time we did have a budget that could have supported that," Toback said, but now it would have been "really a devastating thing for the school district." The money it would have cost the Hoboken school district, Toback said, would have resulted in the elimination of multiple programs.

"I think the Department of Ed responded to the application in a reasonable manner," Toback said.

Although the future of Da Vinci is still uncertain, the proposed school will definitely not be opening in Hoboken in the fall of 2013.

Related Topics: Da Vinci School

CuriousApologist

1:25 pm on Tuesday, October 2, 2012

Another favor to Tea Party Republican Dawn from fellow conservative Christie.

Failing schools, too many November elections, crumbling law-suits - Dawn's legacy.

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puzzledone

5:31 pm on Tuesday, October 2, 2012

Am I the only one who fully believes the CR is completely satirical?

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Hoboken Answer

5:31 pm on Tuesday, October 2, 2012

Another Beth Mason operative hit job! Guess we will be hearing more lies exactly like this one in the coming year.

Too many November elections! LMAO!

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HobokenTownie

5:35 pm on Wednesday, October 3, 2012

Too many November elections? What does that mean... streamlining elections makes sense and it is a way to insure that the elections with the most voter turnout decide the most important issues.

Crumbling lawsuits (it is one word)? Did she fire the trash and now they are suing? Seems like smart practice to me...

Reformerus_Gianticus

4:44 pm on Tuesday, October 2, 2012

Hmm I thought the Christie Administration was supposed to be pro charter school. Perhaps the Divinci School was denied for practical reasons other than pro charter school ideology.

The comment about too many November elections is quite laughable from the Curious Dolt. The whole purpose of the referendum is to consolidate elections to November. One election per year. That is it. Elections are on election day.

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missy regatta

12:20 pm on Monday, October 8, 2012

The Christie Administration supports charter schools-why? Because it costs the State less $$ and reduces line item costs in his budget. NO other reason. Charter schools do not get funding for facilities, transportation, sports and administration etc...if he had his way school vouchers will be next and then you can say goodbye to the public school system in NJ...

Of course it is a good idea to have elections on "Election Day". More pople need to pay attention to what is happening in the school district their taxes are supporting and need to vote for the reasonable people who are running for the school board. This rules out the "Move Forward" ticket. What did the BOE do before the KF contigency was finally elected? Spent money recklessly and unaccountable. Hmmm..... let's just think back to who was on the board then....oh yeah, Mr. Raia.....

Eric Kurta

5:31 pm on Tuesday, October 2, 2012

Curious-R is making fun of Curious-G.

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puzzledone

5:35 pm on Wednesday, October 3, 2012

Eric, I'm glad someone else sees it that way. I was starting to bang my head against the wall here.

Hoboken Parent

5:35 pm on Wednesday, October 3, 2012

What a crock of s*** - "really a devastating thing for the school district." It would have been really devastating for an inefficient Hoboken school system that under-performs and under-serves it's existing students. This is a huge loss for Hoboken children!

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franksinatra

5:35 pm on Wednesday, October 3, 2012

Cerf is no reformer (Christie sure made a big mistake in hiring him) and Toback is grateful for that. Toback and Kids First hate charter schools and anything else that shows how badly the public schools are doing. Toback continues to spout his nonsense about the district losing money if a new charter school opened--the $12,000 or so that Toback would've had to fork over for each charter student is far less than the nearly $25,000 the district spends on each kid now. That $25,000 is the state's second-highest k-12 spending level. When Toback says the impact would've been "devastating," he means a new charter would underline just how bad a job he's doing in running a district that parents don't send their kids to. He's quick to warn of the "elimination of multiple programs," but last year he fired two of the district's best teachers (Ohaus and Hillenbrand) and wrecked two of our signature programs. Toback: Stop your ridiculous alarmist talk about the threat of competition and start doing your job. Our public schools have been in a freefall under KF and spending your time fighting efforts by parents to provide more choices is not why you're here. You preside over a bloated budget that's riddled with waste through and through, yet you whine about a "devastating" impact. And remember Hoboken voters, especially you newcomers who send their kids to charter and private schools, KF voted unanimously against DaVinci and have shown again and again that they detest charter schools.

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Journey

10:30 am on Thursday, October 4, 2012

And remember all you parents that send your children to Hoboken district schools, what did the board of Ed before Kids First do. I remember, that is why I voted for kids first again and why I will never vote for Raia/Russo supported slate.

Khoboken

8:19 pm on Wednesday, October 3, 2012

Hey Mo - you back on the sauce?

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Journey

11:12 am on Thursday, October 4, 2012

If Kids First so detests charter schools, why would Steven Feinstein and Tom Kluepfel have any thing to do with Kids First and why would misters Feinstein an Kluepfel have anything to do with Kids First?

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