Middletown BOE Reopens Closure Talks Amid Deficit and Pending Superintendent Exit
Middletown BOE revisits school closures as a $3.2M budget gap, multi year deficit projections, and superintendent retirement shape the 2026–2027 budget debate.
In March 2025, the Middletown Township Board of Education stood at a crossroads. Faced with a significant operating shortfall, district leaders publicly discussed closing multiple elementary schools. The proposal prompted community to rally around their neighborhood schools. In the weeks that followed, the Board adopted a 10.1 percent tax levy increase and described the decision as a bridge, one that would allow time for strategic planning and a more deliberate, data driven path forward.
Nearly one year later, the February 19, 2026 workshop meeting returned to many of the same structural questions. Consolidation and redistricting scenarios were again part of the public conversation, this time alongside updated multi year deficit projections and news that the superintendent will retire at the end of the school year. The district now approaches another budget deadline with overlapping decisions about finances, facilities, and leadership.
This article reviews the public budget record, the strategic planning process launched in 2025, and the February 19 workshop discussion as reflected in meeting materials and board presentations.




