http://www.njherald.com/story/news/23SPARTABOESPARTA -- The Board of Education meeting Monday night was more vigil than anything else.
Students begged the board not to cut their favorite non-tenured teachers; parents offered to drive their children to school to avoid busing costs; and there were some wet cheeks in the audience as the full import of the $6 million in cuts needed was realized, just days after Gov. Chris Christie's "day of reckoning" budget speech last week.
The board's new budget plan was described as the "dismantling of the school district" by Superintendent Tom Morton. Cuts include the elimination of all sports teams and extracurriculars, the layoff of 24 teachers and four vice principals, and the firing of all guidance counselors at the middle and elementary schools.
The state cut 38 percent of Sparta schools' state aid -- or about $3 million -- as part of the governor's plan to fix state finances. Board members and administrators said they needed to crunch the numbers -- and wield the axe liberally -- just to bring the budget into line with the new financial reality.
"It was simply a matter of getting to a number," Morton told the crowd.
"The dirty work is falling to your school boards and your local town councils," added Jennifer Dericks, the board's president.
But the Sparta school board meeting -- which has been a vitriolic show in the very recent past -- was instead a show of local solidarity Monday. Parents and children told the board that they understood its tough position, and instead pleaded to save what they could from the budget ax -- including standout teachers. Most volunteered to help out where they could, however they could.
Kate Ryan, a student and daughter of a teacher at Sparta High School, said she had seen teachers spontaneously cry in class, because they know their jobs are at stake with the school district's budget problems. She referred to Christie derisively as "just one man" and said she'd be ready to give up her extracurriculars.
"I'm willing to give up whatever I have to, to protect my teachers," Ryan said.
Several parents described the importance of their children's teachers -- and some even shed tears over the possibility of their loss.
The $62.5 million budget includes a $50 million tax levy -- and still represents an increase over last year's budget, although the district is considering a request to exceed the state-imposed 4 percent cap. Morton said there is a plan in the works to bring $1.2 million back into the budget if the teachers' union and the school principals accept a wage freeze. Even after the crowd left, the school board members weighed the value of cutting programs versus firing teachers late into the night.
"We are doing what we can to save our district," Morton assured the crowd.
The public hearing on the budget is scheduled for March 31.