Schools

Fair Lawn Voters To Decide On $25M School Referendum March 13

In addition to more classrooms, the plan would shift 5th grade from elementary schools to middle schools.

FAIR LAWN, NJ — Voters will decide on a $25 million bond referendum next month that would significantly expand classroom space and relocate an entire grade.

A key part of the plan is moving fifth grade from the district's six elementary schools to the two middle schools, which is meant to be a long-term solution to a population boon affecting the district.

Five hundred students have enrolled in the district during the past five years and another 500 are projected to be enrolled within the next five, Superintendent Ernest Palestis said.

Find out what's happening in Fair Lawn-Saddle Brookwith free, real-time updates from Patch.

To date, officials have dealt with the boom by pushing class sizes to their maximum and instituting a policy that lets students attend an elementary school other than the one they were formally assigned to.

Creating a more permanent solution to deal with the boom is required, Palestis said.

Find out what's happening in Fair Lawn-Saddle Brookwith free, real-time updates from Patch.

“We recognize that this is not a short-term bubble, and we explored several options before focusing on the long-term solutions outlined in the referendum proposal," Palestis said.

Thomas Jefferson Middle School would gain 14 classrooms, a new multi-purpose room, two bathrooms and more storage space.

Memorial Middle School would get another nine classrooms.

The high school would also see significant changes.

The media center would more than double in size from 2,000 square feet to 5,000 and the kitchen and cafeteria would be renovated. The HVAC system in the auditorium would be upgraded as well.

The referendum would ask voters to approve a 25-year borrowing plan. The tax increase for the average homeowner would be $106 annually, or about $9 a month. The average Fair Lawn home is valued at $327,000.

Approving the referendum would make the district eligible for $3.8 million in state aid to offset the amount needed to bond for.

“Administrators and the school board worked with multiple consultants to develop a plan that was educationally sound and financially responsible,” Palestis said. “The bond referendum would add physical space, but also allow us to improve the education of Fair Lawn students."


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