Almost three-quarters of New Jersey's charter schools that participated in a recent survey were built before 1970, and a third are housed in buildings not originally built as schools, according to an analysis released today.
The study by the New Jersey Charter Schools Association and two other charter school groups, found a majority of the state's charter schools are "outdated," most don't have their own athletic fields or access to one that's nearby and many students do not attend class in specialized instructional spaces such as science labs, art or music rooms.
The board authorized Mount Laurel law firm Parker McCay to legally challenge the use of public funding for the expansion, which by law must be funded by private or federal money. The board takes issue with a line item in the charter school’s expansion budget that allocates $150,000 of public funds for the purchase of land/improvements.Riverbank disputes the characterization and says that the expansion would be paid for under the charter’s operating budget.