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Court ruling is expected on challenge to N.J. Gov. Christie's school funding executive order

TRENTON — An appeals court panel is expected to rule on N.J. Gov. Chris Christie's executive order to force school districts to use surplus money to make up for cuts in state aid. In February, the Republican governor ordered the freeze of $475 million in school aid payments in 2010 by requiring districts to use their excess surplus instead...

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In a file photo, Gov. Chris Christie signs executive orders during his first day of work in Trenton. Kim Guadagno, Lieutenant Governor, right, watches.

TRENTON — An appeals court panel is expected to rule on N.J. Gov. Chris Christie's executive order to force school districts to use surplus money to make up for cuts in state aid.

In February, the Republican governor ordered the freeze of $475 million in school aid payments in 2010 by requiring districts to use their excess surplus instead of state aid. The cuts were made at the time to help plug a more than $1 billion surplus in the current year budget.

The Perth Amboy school district, which lost $15 million in state aid, filed the lawsuit.

Related coverage:

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Gov. Chris Christie offers more state aid to N.J. schools that freeze teacher pay

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Complete coverage of the 2010 New Jersey State Budget


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