Bret Schundler, New Jersey Education Commissioner, Fired After 'Race To The Top' Mistake

BETH DeFALCO and GEOFF MULVIHILL   08/27/10 07:47 PM ET   AP

Bret Schundler

TRENTON, N.J. — Gov. Chris Christie fired his education commissioner Friday, days after it was revealed that a simple mistake on an application might have cost New Jersey a $400 million education grant.

The dismissal of Commissioner Bret Schundler comes after New Jersey became the top runner-up for the Race to the Top grants, missing out by only a few points. The Star-Ledger of Newark later reported that budget figures for the wrong years were supplied in one section of the application.

Christie had defended Schundler on Wednesday and blamed the U.S. Education Department for considering form over substance. Christie said this week that Schundler gave the federal government the missing information during a meeting in Washington this month. But a video released Thursday by the federal Education Department shows that wasn't the case.

"I was extremely disappointed to learn that the videotape of the Race to the Top presentation was not consistent with the information provided to me by the New Jersey Department of Education and which I then conveyed to the people of New Jersey," Christie said in a statement Friday. "As a result, I ordered an end to Bret Schundler's service as New Jersey's Education Commissioner and as a member of my administration."

In an interview at his Jersey City home Friday, Schundler responded that he gave the governor's staff the right story.

He said he met with Christie on Wednesday before the governor talked to the media about the grant application error.

"I told him stuff that he had said wasn't accurate on Wednesday morning when he was telling me what he was going to say to you guys," Schundler told a group of reporters. "I said, 'Stop. Where you say I gave the numbers, I did not give them the numbers.'"

He also shared printouts of e-mails from Tuesday that he says show that he accurately told the governor's public relations office what happened during the meeting in question. On one, he writes an account that was backed up by the video: "All we could do was confirm that we had erred – the 2008 data was not included," he says.

Christie spokesman Michael Drewniak said Schundler is misrepresenting what he told the governor's office verbally and misinterpreting the emails to try to cover up that he misled the governor.

"We regret that Mr. Schundler continues to sully his own image by engaging in revisionist history," Drewniak said. "Mr. Schundler was the Administration's only source for what occurred in the Race to the Top presentation. All of the Governor's statements were based on Mr. Schundler's account."

Schundler said he was asked to resign, but he requested to be fired instead so he could collect unemployment insurance.

"I have a mortgage to pay and a daughter about to start college," he said.

Schundler, who served as Jersey City's mayor for most of the 1990s, was an unconventional choice as a member of the governor's cabinet.

As a Republican, he broke ground to become mayor of Jersey City, a diverse city dominated by Democrats.

He's known as a policy wonk and an intellectual, a conservative from a big city and a long-winded politician who has trouble making soundbites. He was known for helping Jersey City become a major outpost for Manhattan's financial industry and for pushing charter schools.

He ran for governor in 2001 as a conservative antiestablishment candidate, and he pulled off a surprising victory in the Republican primary, but lost in the general election.

He later taught, then was chief executive officer at The King's College, a Christian liberal arts school housed in the Empire State Building.

He came to the education commissioner's job as one of New Jersey's most fervent advocates for opening up public schools to competition by expanding publicly funded charter schools and allowing taxpayer money to be used for scholarships for students to attend private schools.

It seemed he might also be a key player in supporting Christie in his campaign against the power of the New Jersey Education Association, the state's main teachers union.

But that's not exactly the way it turned out.

In May, just before the Race to the Top grant application was due, Schundler made some compromises on the merit pay components of the proposal to win the endorsement of the NJEA.

Christie rejected those compromises and submitted a grant application that didn't include them.

NJEA President Barbara Keshishian said Friday that firing Schundler amounted to making him a scapegoat for a mistake that she contends the governor had a role in creating.

Derrell Bradford, executive director of Excellent Education for Everyone, which advocates greater school choice, called Schundler's dismissal "dramatic."

"Bret is a grand champion for this agenda, for the education reform movement, as is the governor," Bradford said. "The agenda is still being advanced because it's bigger that any one person."

State Assembly speaker Sheila Oliver, a Democrat, welcomed the firing.

But she says she's still moving ahead with a hearing Sept. 7 on what went wrong on the Race to the Top application.

"New Jerseyans deserve an honest accounting from Gov. Christie about what truly happened with this costly error," she said.

The state Senate is holding a similar heading Sept. 23 – and inviting Schundler.

On Friday, Christie named Assistant Education Commissioner Rochelle Hendricks to be acting commissioner while a search is conducted for a permanent replacement for Schundler.

___

DeFalco reported from Jersey City.

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TRENTON, N.J. — Gov. Chris Christie fired his education commissioner Friday, days after it was revealed that a simple mistake on an application might have cost New Jersey a $400 million educatio...
TRENTON, N.J. — Gov. Chris Christie fired his education commissioner Friday, days after it was revealed that a simple mistake on an application might have cost New Jersey a $400 million educatio...
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09:46 AM on 08/30/2010
as a US taxpayer I am disgusted period. why are US taxpayer dollars going being allocated to a select group of states for school funding. first of all school funding should be provided by your local city or municipality taxes, not the federal govt or state governments

then put on top of that this lottery for a select group of qualifying states to get US taxpayer dollars while others suffer - time for states to cut the ambilical order from the feds.
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HUFFPOST COMMUNITY MODERATOR
WasteNJ
All Out Of Bubble Gum.
11:16 PM on 09/04/2010
New Jersey pays out more in federal taxes than we receive back, while a lot of southern (red) states receive a lot more funds than they pay in. That's some umbilical cord.
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Lisa Shields
Poet & Advocate For Special Needs Children
07:53 AM on 08/30/2010
Honestly, I've never commented on his weight...save to comment that no woman HALF his size would have gotten the nomination...much less been elected.

But there is more to this than meets the eye. Education funding from the feds is keyed to actually state SPENDING...meaning the states who spend the most, also claim the lions share of additional federal aid. This gets tricky when you get "cut happy". It can, and will result in loss of further funding. The formula in some cases is a loss of ten dollars for every one dollar cut...meaning it will cost our taxpayers millions...to save thousands.

Maybe I missed "new math", but this adds up to a disaster, dressed as a "crusade".

Worse, the battle cry of "privatize" doesn't extend to the special needs schools that are already private, and do a fine job with our children. Our kids are being treated like lab rats, as parents are being pressured to return them to districts that failed them in the first place.

Man...people are going to be upset when they get the "bill" for all those cuts...and note that their taxes have not been reduced...just their services.
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WasteNJ
All Out Of Bubble Gum.
11:18 PM on 09/04/2010
You nailed it. f/f
01:06 AM on 08/30/2010
As a New Jersey resident, I am disgusted! Yes, everyone makes mistakes, but when you are the boss the buck stops with you. This is inexcusible! $400 MILLION freakin dollars! Are you kidding me?!? Christie has made teachers the enemies and the righties love it. He refuses to raise taxes on the rich (those who earn more that 400k!) but somehow he is supposed to be a hero?

Wait until the fall, when parents really get to see how his budget cuts will affect their schools. I bet they won't be singing his praises then. Just wait until you have to provide your child's toilet paper. The library where I live already had to close one day a week due to budget cuts. I am afraid to find out what the schools will be cutting.

I guess he will be happy when NJ loses it's status of having one of the best school systems in the country. Sigh.
08:44 AM on 08/30/2010
He doesn't care if he's dismantling one of the best public school systems in the country,his kids got to private schools and he wants to be able to use his tax dollars to offset his tuition costs. He should be held to the same "merit" standards he wants teachers to be held to...Gov. - you're fired!
09:52 AM on 08/30/2010
It's because of voters like you and your insatiable appetite for deficit spending and no reduction in any corner that has left NJ in the huge mess it finds itself. Everybody has to make a little sacrifice when cuts are made to balance the budget. Your candidate of choice Corzine was the one who left NJ in the hole it finds itself today. Tax hikes, poor services, bloated budgets, giant deficits, rampant corruption and a governor who kowtows to union thugs, well that's Corzine for you.
It's the 'me first' attitude of these union members, who're partly responsible of the problem. Eg: The teacher making over $100,000 (benefits included) who Christie scorched during one of his Townhall meetings who threw a b*t*h fit over her guaranteed pay raise. It's all about me, me, me, isn't it?
03:10 PM on 08/30/2010
No, maybe you don't remember but it was Christine Whitman who took money from the pension fund and never replaced it -- that's what put nj in the hole.
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HUFFPOST COMMUNITY MODERATOR
WasteNJ
All Out Of Bubble Gum.
11:23 PM on 09/04/2010
So why veto the millionaire's tax extension? You can't do that, and cry about funds.

If it wasn't for unions you'd be working 7 days a week next to a 6-year old.
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njgal4obama
All others will be towed.
12:34 AM on 08/30/2010
Well I think Christie has effectively eliminated his competition in the next election.
11:06 PM on 08/29/2010
Christie is outstanding
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HUFFPOST COMMUNITY MODERATOR
studmoose
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01:25 PM on 08/30/2010
Really, Don't try to idolize him like another Sarah Palin. He's OK. That's it.

No better or worse than Christie Whitman or Jon Corzine... which isn't saying much.
09:33 PM on 08/30/2010
A outstanding liar. The video showed the education dept. giviing them a chance to present the right figures and phat boy lied on camera saying they didn't give them a chance. He didn't know they taped it, ha.
06:57 PM on 08/29/2010
I thought Republicans were supposed to be the ones with all the business savvy. Can't even fill out paperwork properly.
When my daughter applies to a college, my whole family proofreads it. When the state applies for hundreds of millions in aid, it all falls on one person? Doubtful.
05:38 PM on 08/29/2010
So much hate and so little time.
04:29 PM on 08/29/2010
please... call me when the huffpost homepage headline reads "Voters fire Christie for 'education' error"
06:21 PM on 08/29/2010
Yes- we now know, through videotapes and Schundler's wisely saved emails that the mistake was Christie's, not Schundler's. Fix that headline, please. Maybe something like "Christie Fires Scapegoat Schundler to Cover Up His Own Mistakes."
06:36 PM on 08/29/2010
ha ha good one
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02:04 PM on 08/29/2010
The real story, as everyone knows in NJ, is that Gov. Bully didn't want the money, but had to make it appear that he did.

Sabotage, pure and simple.

The cover-up is already unraveling.
06:22 PM on 08/29/2010
Yup. Sabatoogie.
06:37 PM on 08/29/2010
yeah right? fir4st he said he wouldn't take the money, then that didnt look viable politically, but in the end there was this paperwork error...
10:47 AM on 08/29/2010
LOL. As I conservative I get great joy reading as you lib's rip this guy's weight and image, because you have nothing better to go on. NJ loves this guy, and much of the country is looking towards him as he systemically dismantles every liberal piece of legislation he possibly can.
11:28 AM on 08/29/2010
I fail to find humor in anything coming out of Trenton and landing in the laps over over taxed Jerseyites.
12:13 PM on 08/29/2010
N.J. loves this guy? Not thinking Progressives.
09:01 AM on 08/29/2010
The race is to determine who I dispise most Christie, Beck, Limbaugh, Cheney.
"Big Head" Hannity such a cast of despicable characters all considered good amerikans.

Why was I born here?
10:43 AM on 08/29/2010
I'm not sure, but if you could leave and leave quickly that would be great. Thanks!
11:48 AM on 08/29/2010
Your making me feel unwanted. You mist have been at Becks rally yesterday

Please like me
05:31 AM on 08/29/2010
I just don't get it. Would common sense not dictate that the process for funding at that level of importance be proofread by at least one competent colleague? In 1994, I applied for a teacher's grant from the NEH to freshen my perspective through a summer seminar in France. I remember asking three colleagues I respected to proofread and critique my work before submitting it. Admittedly, the process was minuscule in comparison to the grant forms the NJ Department of Education was assigned to prepare and file. At the same time, the grant for which I was applying was chump change (less than $15K) and done on my own initiative and my own time. My summer in France turned out to be the most exciting educational experience of my life. The hundreds of students whom I worked with in the ten years that I remained in the classroom after that benefited beyond anything I could describe. Three years later, the National Department of Education, in conjunction with the Presidential Scholar Program honored me with a citation and plaque for "inspirational teaching" at the recommendation of a student who had been designated a Presidential Scholar. Finally, five years later, after almost thirty years of teaching, the inept bumbling and politicking of administrators and bureaucrats led me to retire early in frustration from a career I loved. My work was not in NJ, but the ineptness, mismanagement and squandering of fiscal resources is not confined to any one geographical region.
12:10 PM on 08/29/2010
Common sense dictates that Chris Christie is entirely to blame for this. And this was no mere "clerical error".
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
ScapeGoat
Facts are stubborn things. Science Rocks!
01:29 PM on 08/29/2010
Exactly, the application was correct until Crsipy Cream got a hold of it and changed it the day before it went to Washington.
He changed a perfectly good document that would have gotten NJ the money.
12:00 AM on 08/29/2010
It's refreshing to see someone getting fired in government. It's too bad that Christie can't fire himself.
10:44 AM on 08/29/2010
Why would he? He's done more for NJ than the last 10 governors combined.
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12:46 PM on 08/29/2010
apx, What are you smoking?
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
ScapeGoat
Facts are stubborn things. Science Rocks!
01:30 PM on 08/29/2010
He has done more to destroy NJ then any other governor.
10:31 PM on 08/28/2010
So much for Republicans being the ones that no so much about business! They are pathetic. Christie is pathetic. Shame on you, my fellow New Jerseyans for electing Christie in the first place!
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
ScapeGoat
Facts are stubborn things. Science Rocks!
01:31 PM on 08/29/2010
I never voted for this jerk. People are surprised by what he is doing, I'm not. If you listened to him during the campaign, he said that his is what he was going to do.
Plus, how could you trust this guy after what he tried to to do Menendez? Remember, all the controversy he ginned up about an ethics probe. When asked, he would say that he could not comment on an ongoing investigation. I told some people who believed that bs that nothing would ever come of the "probe" because there was no scandal to begin with. Just as I predicted, as soon as the election was over, the whole Menendez controversy disappear.

I know for a fact that he is hiring people with no college education at salaries starting at $103,000 a year (he just hired 5 more). Remember the report that said he is hiring more people at the $100,000 level then any other governor? It is totally true.

State workers are retiring in record numbers to get away from him. His staff has a high turn over rate because they can't stand him. As for Bret, he ran that department like a gestap0 camp.

This man is doing more to destroy this state then most people can imagine.”
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Jacqueline3
09:12 PM on 08/28/2010
Can Christie fire himself?
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HUFFPOST COMMUNITY MODERATOR
studmoose
This Micro-Bio Intentionally Left Blank
01:28 PM on 08/30/2010
Why? Nothing is ever HIS fault!