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- EDUCATION, Page 48State TakeoverNew Jersey seizes control of a faili-ng city school system
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- New Jersey made some unhappy educational history last week.
- With a go-ahead from an administrative-law judge, the state board
- of education voted unanimously to disband the local school board
- in Jersey City and oust all six top administrators. For the next
- five years, the district will be run by an all-powerful school czar
- named by the state. New Jersey thus became the first U.S. state to
- seize total control of a local school district because of
- educational rather than financial collapse. It may not be the last:
- five other states now have laws allowing takeovers.
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- Governor Thomas Kean, who last year rammed through a takeover
- law against tough resistance from teachers' union lobbyists,
- administrators and school boards, said the decision would end
- "educational child abuse" in New Jersey's second largest city.
- State investigators charged that too much of the city's $180
- million school budget went into corruption and patronage instead
- of desperately needed maintenance and upgraded instruction. Among
- symptoms of distress: 46% of ninth-graders manage passing grades
- on a basic-skills test (vs. 89% state-wide), and 46% of the city's
- 52,000 youngsters attend private schools.