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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.

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Monmouth County GOP and the Disappearing Alex Zdan Articles

Archived records show Central Jersey Newswire removed favorable Alex Zdan coverage as New Jersey GOP county conventions approach the 2026 U.S. Senate race.

January 6 — not that one — was a busy day for New Jersey Republicans. As news circulated announcing that Monmouth County Clerk Christine Giordano Hanlon had been elected chair of the state GOP¹, something quieter was happening online. Articles about Alex Zdan began disappearing from Central Jersey Newswire, an “independent outlet” with previously documented ties to the Monmouth County Republican Committee.

The timing raises a question: on the eve of county endorsements for the 2026 U.S. Senate race, does this digital cleanup signal shifting Republican support within Monmouth County?

New Jersey’s unique county line system gives local party committees unusual influence over primary elections. In many counties, an endorsement by party leadership can shape ballot position and, by extension, the likely outcome of a primary.

This year, Democratic incumbent U.S. Senator Cory Booker is seeking re-election. On the Republican side, no consensus candidate has emerged. That vacuum has made early county conventions especially significant.

County conventions are scheduled throughout February and March². Last week, Passaic County Republicans endorsed Alex Zdan for the U.S. Senate race against Booker. The endorsement positions Zdan as an early favorite in at least one key North Jersey county.

But the picture in Monmouth County appears more complicated.

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Lawsuit Challenges Moderation on Monmouth County Sheriff’s Facebook Page

Plaintiff alleges comments critical of officials were hidden from public view.

A new civil lawsuit filed in Superior Court in Monmouth County raises questions about how the Monmouth County Sheriff’s Office moderates comments on its official Facebook page and whether those practices violate state constitutional free-speech protections.

The case1, brought by Laurie Tietjen against the Monmouth County Sheriff’s Office and Sheriff Shaun Golden, alleges that her comments on the Sheriff’s Office Facebook page were selectively restricted or hidden from public view through a practice commonly described as “shadowbanning,” while remaining visible to her when she was logged into her account.

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New Lawsuit Raises Questions About Partisan Influence in the Middletown BOE

A newly filed lawsuit alleges political retaliation, misuse of public records, and undisclosed coordination between campaign consultants and a local media outlet, raising questions about partisan influence inside a public school district.

A civil lawsuit filed in Monmouth County raises unresolved questions about whether partisan conflict within a school board was directed at a long-time teacher, shifting focus away from education and eroding public confidence in district governance.

The case1, brought by Daniel Rodrick against the Middletown Township Public School District and Board of Education, centers on allegations of political retaliation, misuse of public records, and the coordination of undisclosed political content published by Central Jersey Newswire. A consulting firm, Archangel Strategy Group LLC, is named as a defendant and is alleged to have played a role in preparing or facilitating content that contributed to media coverage critical of Rodrick.

At a hearing held on January 30, 2026, the court declined to grant emergency relief and also declined to dismiss the case, allowing the case to proceed through the normal litigation process.

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