Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
The board appoints a superintendent to oversee the district's day-to-day operations and a business administrator to supervise the business functions of the district. [33] [34] [35] Seats on the nine-member board are allocated based on population, with eights seats assigned to Manalapan Township and one to Englishtown. [36]
Voters this fall will have to decide if the Manalapan-Englishtown school district should borrow over $115 million for school repairs.
Attorney Bruce Padula, who represents both Middletown and Manalapan-Englishtown told The Post he “considers it a victory that [districts] are now put in the same position as every other school ...
The Manalapan-Englishtown Regional, Marlboro Township and Middletown school districts all changed Policy 5756 in ways that could result in disparate treatment of transgender kids, the state argued ...
Manalapan and Englishtown formally joined as a regional elementary school district in 1963, with an initial enrollment of 1,140 students; The student body is primarily from Manalapan Township, which accounts for about 95% of enrollment, with Englishtown students accounting for the remaining 5%. [93]
Manalapan High School opened with an enrollment of 900 students from Englishtown and Manalapan Township, who had previously attended Marlboro High School. Freehold High School was closed for a $300,000 renovation project during the 1971-72 school year, during which it operated with 1,600 students using the new building that had been completed ...
Englishtown is a rapidly growing borough in western Monmouth County, in the U.S. state of New Jersey.The community is located within the Raritan Valley region.As of the 2020 United States census, the borough's population was 2,346, [9] its highest decennial count ever and an increase of 499 (+27.0%) from the 2010 census count of 1,847, [18] [19] which in turn reflected an increase of 83 (+4.7% ...
The union and board reached a new contract settlement without acrimony for 2007–2010. In October 2006, the board of education voted to implement a random drug testing procedure that would require all students in extracurricular activities or with a parking space at either high school to submit their name to a pool for random selection. [7]