The Bergen Record

Defeated incumbent stays on school board

Will fill unexpired term of Saddle River trustee

- Marsha A. Stoltz NorthJerse­y.com USA TODAY NETWORK – NEW JERSEY

SADDLE RIVER — A Board of Education incumbent defeated in November’s election has been appointed to the unexpired term of a fellow trustee.

Trustee Evelyn Nissirios, who lost to newcomer Kunal Bhatia by 26 votes in a rare challenge for a school board seat, was appointed to fill the one-year unexpired term of trustee John Peros at the Dec. 13 board meeting.

The final vote in November had Bhatia defeating Nissirios by 481-455 for a full three-year term.

“We hope that having two members who received such confidence from voters will help unite the community,” Board of Education President Emily Kaufman said in an email statement.

Peros resigned in October, and the board had 65 days to fill the seat, Kaufman said. Nissirios’ resignatio­n was accepted at the Dec. 6 meeting, Kaufman said.

“After consulting with the New Jersey Department of Education, New Jersey Associatio­n of School Boards and the New Jersey County Executive, that open seat was offered to Kunal Bhatia to fill early,” Kaufman said. “Mr. Bhatia decided to wait until the January reorganiza­tion meeting.”

Kaufman said the board received applicatio­ns, conducted public interviews, and chose a candidate “in accordance with guidelines set forth by the New Jersey Department of Education.”

Kaufman gave no explanatio­n as to what issue required two candidates to “unite the community.”

Parents complained about discrimina­tory busing

Nissirios was last singled out in a September 2022 dispute over middle school bus routes carrying children in grades six to eight to Eric Smith Middle School in Ramsey, which they attend because there is no middle school in the Saddle River district.

One of two door-to-door pickup and drop-off routes was unexpected­ly eliminated last fall for budgetary reasons, requiring middle school parents along that route to drop off and pick up their children at the elementary school — Wandell School on East Allendale Road.

The route used by Nissirios and fellow trustee Yasmin Elshami was not shortened or eliminated, allowing those children to be picked up and dropped off at or near their homes.

At least five parents filed complaints with the state Education Department accusing the Board of Education of discrimina­tory practices.

Middle school question

Another possible dispute is looming over the district’s $78,000 feasibilit­y study as a first step in determinin­g whether it should continue the 25year practice of sending middle school students to Ramsey or return them to be educated in the district. The current agreement with Ramsey ends June 30, 2024, and the district was required to send a “letter of intent” in October “to keep the credits that are currently in the agreement.”

Some parents have protested that the district did not adequately pursue a third option to send middle school children to Allendale, Upper Saddle River or Ho-Ho-Kus. The students from those schools go on to attend Northern Highlands Regional High School.

Saddle River students have a unique choice of attending either Ramsey High School or Northern Highlands, with 16 currently at Ramsey and 99 at Northern Highlands. Parents argue that their students are better prepared to enter Northern Highlands if they have attended one of its feeder grade schools because the curriculum­s are coordinate­d to prepare students for high school courses.

Saddle River school board members have responded that an offer was made to participat­e in the study and declined by the three grade schools. It is unclear what offer was made to the grade schools, or whether any of the districts have room to accept Saddle River middle school students.

The district was projected to issue a report in January.

 ?? ?? Nissirios
Nissirios
 ?? ?? Bhatia
Bhatia

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