New Jersey
Enrollment in New Jersey’s public schools dropped by 18,000 students since start of COVID-19 pandemic
Enrollment in New Jersey’s conventional public faculties fell by about 18,000 within the two years for the reason that pandemic led to highschool closures and different classroom disruptions, in accordance with new enrollment knowledge from the state’s Division of Training.
The losses got here within the state’s city facilities and suburban districts alike. In October, Passaic reported 800 fewer college students enrolled in its faculties in comparison with two years prior. In Toms River, the loss exceeded 600. Atlantic Metropolis’s enrollment declined by greater than 400, because it did within the South Orange-Maplewood district. Edgewater’s enrollment slumped by practically 300 college students, 30% of its 2019 faculty inhabitants.
The figures mirror a nationwide development, with public faculty enrollment plunging by at the very least 1.2 million nationwide in the course of the pandemic, in accordance with an enrollment tracker from conservative suppose tank American Enterprise Institute. Although the Backyard State’s public faculty losses are usually not as dramatic as these in different states — New York Metropolis public faculty enrollment dropped 5% — the two-year drop is the biggest New Jersey has seen in latest reminiscence.
Decreases are usually not unprecedented: From September 2016 to September 2018, enrollment in New Jersey’s conventional public faculties tumbled practically 14,000. And year-over-year enrollment adjustments for the final decade have been unfavorable for all however two years.
It is unclear how a lot COVID restrictions fueled the enrollment drop. Newark, the state’s largest faculty district, saved its masks mandate for months after the state mentioned districts may permit youngsters to go maskless and its enrollment grew within the final two years by practically 4,000.
However critics of COVID-19 measures applied in faculties throughout the nation beginning in early 2020 — obligatory masking, distant studying, quarantining — say these adjustments prompted mother and father to take their youngsters out of public faculties and enroll them elsewhere, or home-school them.
A spokesman for academics union the New Jersey Training Affiliation cautioned there could possibly be different causes for declining enrollment, like steadily declining beginning charges seen nationwide.
The enrollment figures, although newly printed by state training officers, are from stories public faculty districts undergo the state every October, and it is potential enrollment may have rebounded in some districts since then. Mike Kenny, the spokesman for Toms River faculties, mentioned the 14,000-student district in Ocean County has gained 200 college students since October.
Kenny mentioned it could be tough to quote any causes for the 2019-2021 lower, including it could be “unlikely” to shortly get well the 600 college students misplaced since 2019.
“We’re at present trending upward, and our enrollment/demographic knowledge reveals us leveling off to barely growing from our present ranges over the subsequent 5 years,” he mentioned.
The Division of Training has beforehand reported a 33,000-student drop between the 2018-19 and 2020-21 faculty years. These figures have been based mostly on district enrollment stories from June of these years.
How New Jersey fared
New Jersey had a complete of 1,320,225 college students enrolled in conventional public faculties in October 2019. The state’s first coronavirus case was recognized in March 2020, and Gov. Phil Murphy ordered public faculties to start distant studying that month.
By October 2020, enrollment had dropped to 1,304,920 college students, a 15,305 lower practically twice as giant as any year-by-year change going again at the very least a decade.
Final October, enrollment decreased once more, to 1,302,139, for a complete of 18,086 fewer college students than two years prior.
The drop in enrollment at conventional public faculties got here as constitution faculties noticed enrollment rise nearly 6%, from 55,604 in October 2019 to 58,777 final October.
The 800-student drop in Passaic’s faculty district, which educates about 13,000 college students in 18 faculties, was the biggest within the state. Three Ocean County districts — Toms River, Lakewood, and Jackson Township — misplaced about 600 every, with Lakewood’s loss representing 11% of its 2019 enrollment. In Montclair, there have been 542 fewer college students beginning the present faculty yr in comparison with pre-pandemic numbers, an 8% drop.
About 150 districts gained college students since 2019, most by fewer than 50 college students. Newark’s enrollment grew by 3,900. Trenton’s district expanded by 1,800, and Plainfield gained practically 1,500.
General, enrollment at New Jersey’s conventional public faculties dropped 1.4% during the last two years. The lower from the prior two-year interval was 0.02%.
The shrinking enrollment from 2019 to 2021 was not seen throughout all demographics. Together with constitution faculty enrollment, the variety of white college students in public faculties statewide dropped by 39,000, and the variety of Asian college students fell by 2,400. Black enrollment climbed 900, and the variety of Latino college students grew by 20,100.
Why the change?
A state Division of Training spokesman mentioned he couldn’t speculate on what drove the drop.
Danielle Farrie of authorized advocacy group Training Legislation Middle mentioned it is exhausting to know what causes enrollment to fall, including the pandemic massively disrupted two faculty years and certain drove mother and father’ selections to ship their youngsters to personal or constitution faculties that remained open.
“I feel it is exhausting that the districts have been in a tough spot final yr, trying to make the most effective of a really difficult state of affairs when it comes to prioritizing pupil well being and security with in-person studying,” Farrie mentioned.
With fewer COVID restrictions this yr, she added, “a few of these fears will wash away and hopefully we begin to see enrollments rebound.”
The speed of white college students enrolled in public faculties had declined steadily pre-pandemic, Farrie famous.
Nat Malkus, deputy director of training coverage research at American Enterprise Institute, is the founding father of AEI’s enrollment tracker, which says 25 states noticed greater enrollment losses than New Jersey since 2020. COVID restrictions like masks mandates are on the root of public faculty enrollment drops, Malkus mentioned.
“I do not suppose the lesson there may be ‘folks hate masks, and due to this fact they will not be coming again to highschool,’” he mentioned. “However I do suppose that masks are indicative of higher adjustments to the college day, an extended, extra everlasting deviation from normalcy, and that I do suppose is on the root of those enrollment declines.”
Steve Baker, the New Jersey Training Affiliation spokesman, mentioned declining beginning charges may additionally clarify why enrollment in New Jersey public faculties fell, and he bristled on the notion that enrollment drops imply mother and father have pulled their youngsters out of public faculties.
“It looks like a reasonably politically handy interpretation that is likely to be ignoring a way more apparent underlying trigger,” he mentioned. “What if there are simply fewer school-aged youngsters every year?”
Baker known as American Enterprise Institute “famously anti-public training.”
Brooke Rigilano and her husband eliminated their 5 youngsters from Runnemede public faculties final yr over pandemic guidelines and disruptions. Rigilano mentioned she didn’t just like the masks, contact tracing, and quarantine guidelines, however continued distant studying turned a difficulty too. The youngsters are all homeschooled now.
“We by no means considered homeschooling previous to the pandemic. And after we began homeschooling, we thought: ‘When the whole lot settles down and goes again to regular, we will ship them again,’” she mentioned. “However the whole lot just isn’t going again to regular. Faculties have adjusted the whole lot. Due to the shortage of studying in the course of the pandemic, everybody’s behind. As an alternative of serving to the children catch up, I really feel like they’re reducing the requirements.”
New Jersey Monitor is a part of States Newsroom, a community of reports bureaus supported by grants and a coalition of donors as a 501c(3) public charity. New Jersey Monitor maintains editorial independence. Contact Editor Terrence McDonald for questions: data@newjerseymonitor.com. Comply with New Jersey Monitor on Fb and Twitter.
New Jersey
What is digital ID and why doesn’t New Jersey have it?
California DMV rolls out digital driver’s license pilot program
Program allows a driver’s license on your phone. Director of California’s DMV talks about how it works, how it transforms airport check-in experience.
Fox – Ktvu
In the age of digital wallets and contactless convenience, a growing number of states are embracing the option to add driver’s licenses and state IDs to Apple Wallet.
These digital IDs can be added to iPhone users’ Wallet app alongside digital credit cards, boarding passes and event tickets.
New Jersey, though, isn’t one of them.
What states have Apple Wallet IDs?
As of now, several states have partnered with Apple to enable digital IDs. They can be added directly to Apple Wallet and used in airports, businesses, or government offices.
For instance, TSA checkpoints at several airports, including LaGuardia, JFK and Newark Liberty, already take digital IDs, and more are being added.
But, New Jersey doesn’t yet have digital driver’s licenses.
In early 2024, state lawmakers moved a bill directing the state’s Motor Vehicle Commission to develop digital driver’s licenses. But that measure gives the state six years to make it happen. The bill is winding its way through the legislative process.
Apple, though, continues to expand partnerships with more states to create Wallet-compatible IDs.
Connecticut, for example, was one of the first states to announce a digital ID rollout but hasn’t yet launched it. Lawmakers in West Virginia, New Mexico and Montana have said digital driver’s licenses are a priority.
New Jersey
Fresh snow coats some North Jersey towns for a white Christmas
2-minute read
How rare is a white Christmas and how long has it been for some cities
A white Christmas means more than 1 inch of snow is on the ground on Christmas day, but how frequently does this occur?
New Jersey experienced a frosty December — and Christmas has proved no exception.
Christmas morning temperatures accross the Garden State dipped into the low to mid-20s in much of the state, and even into the teens in higher elevations, forecasters said. While most towns saw little to no overnight snow accumulation, some lucky areas awoke to a white Christmas.
How much snow did North Jersey see?
Snowfall leading up to Christmas was light but enough to dust parts of the state with festive flurries. Bergenfield reported one of the highest accumulation, measuring 1 inch of snow on Christmas Eve. Nearby, Ramsey recorded 1.1 inches, and Sparta with 1.6 inches of snowfall.
In New Providence, Paramus and Stewartsville, snow totals were less than an inch, with each town reporting between 0.6 and 0.8 inches. Somerset logged an inch, while Wantage received 1.3 inches.
For those dreaming of a white Christmas, Bergenfield, Ramsey, Sparta and Wantage offered picturesque views, with enough snow to blanket the ground in holiday cheer. Meanwhile, other areas in the state settled for a chilly but snow-free holiday.
Whether blanketed in white or simply bundled up, New Jersey residents should brace for continued cold as the year comes to a close.
New Jersey
A Modest Theory About Those Drones Over New Jersey
The welter of stories about unidentified drones over New York and New Jersey multiply, as do the myriad speculations. Thus far the narratives fall into three categories: private drones, those deployed by hostile foreign actors, those belonging to US authorities on a shadowy unacknowledged mission. The media has taken up the cause and the story has gone mainstream, with baffled officials furnishing no unified explanation – and President elect Trump weighing in. This installment of the column will add one more theory to the growing noise, but a theory grounded in full context, covering all the known facts and hopefully all the more plausible for that albeit.
To begin with, let us dismiss the private drone scenario quickly. Any private entity causing such panic would soon admit it and apologize for fear of being found out. The authorities via satellite would know whence they came, track them and reveal the facts. Next, the foreign actor theory – again, as Donald Trump says, the military or intelligence people would know. They might stay silent about it for fear of provoking a confrontation with a foreign power. The US is, sadly, prone to such deliberate passivity, the latest example being the Havana Syndrome findings by Congress which rejected the intelligence community’s previous report that the Syndrome doesn’t exist and no foreign power is responsible. The recent ad hoc Congressional Committee officially found that the Havana Syndrome is real and a foreign state is likely behind it.
So, back to the drones: do the authorities know that a foreign power is responsible for the drone outbreak but won’t say so? Timing is everything in such events. The Biden White House, as we have seen with aid spikes to Ukraine and granting permission to hit inside Russia, is not shy of adding last minute foreign policy complications to the incoming administration. Were it a hostile power, we would know all about who unleashed the drones. Which leaves the third and last category, that the drone phenomenon was a government initiative which authorities do not wish to acknowledge, a stealth operation that went public inadvertently. As this column is focused on geostrategic affairs, the possible explanation falls into its bailiwick.
Nobody has quite understood why the US and Germany refused, until recently, to allow Ukraine to use allied weapons to strike inside Russia (Germany still refuses). All manner of theories have swirled but nothing coherent obtained, other than an abiding fear of Russian retaliation. Yet Washington gave the go-ahead for Ukraine to use American weapons across its border in recent months, especially after Trump’s electoral victory. Did the Russian threat to retaliate against the US diminish? Did the US suddenly get safer? And why did it take so long to grant permission? The truth is, any sort of highly visible and attributable strike against the US was never a risk because Moscow would have suffered devastating retaliation. But an anonymous catastrophe in a major US city would work. A kind of secret Samson Option, or hidden nuclear device in Germany or America should Russian soil be bombed by allied weapons. The great efficacy of such a threat lies not in its use but entirely in the threat, the ambiguity. And the restraint or doubt it induces.
Nor should the threat be too visible or public. Anything that detonates massively raises an outcry, puts pressure on the authorities to find a return address, a clear culprit. No foreign power would risk such a big provocation that it would be identifiable and cause retaliation. Witness 9/11. One has to conclude, therefore, that the real version of such a threat would be scary rather than hugely destructive. The device would need to be constructed discreetly and stowed or delivered equally discreetly. And no foreign state actor would take responsibility. So, a small radiation device fits the bill. And this is precisely what New Jersey officials have been saying about the drone activity, namely that it’s our side looking for a small medical isotope gone missing, one that was aboard a container ship and went missing. But a federal agency has just denied the US was flying drones in search of nuclear radiation. All of which is standard procedure for stifling panic.
Finally, there’s this: the foreign actors would not deliver a direct threat. They would retain deniability, as in the Havana Syndrome. If, indeed, it’s a radiation device, nobody knows who was behind it, though the technical sophistication suggests only rival superpowers qualify as suspects. Which brings us back to the Russian dark ops and the inexplicable restraint of the Biden White House over helping Ukraine.
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