New Jersey Administrative Code
Title 6A - EDUCATION
Chapter 23A - FISCAL ACCOUNTABILITY, EFFICIENCY AND BUDGETING PROCEDURES
Subchapter 22 - FINANCIAL OPERATIONS OF CHARTER SCHOOLS
Section 6A:23A-22.6 - Public relations and professional services; board policies; efficiency
Universal Citation: NJ Admin Code 6A:23A-22.6
Current through Register Vol. 56, No. 18, September 16, 2024
(a) Each charter school board shall establish by policy or policies a strategy or strategies in order to minimize the cost of public relations as defined in N.J.A.C. 6A:23A-9.3(c)14, and professional services. The policy or policies shall include, to the extent practicable and cost effective, but need not be limited to, the following provisions:
1. A maximum dollar limit,
established annually prior to budget preparation, for public relations, as
defined in
6A:23A-9.3(c)14,
and each type of professional service, with appropriate notification to the
board of trustees if it becomes necessary to exceed the maximum. Upon such
notification, the board of trustees may adopt a dollar increase in the maximum
amount through formal board action;
2. Establishment of procedures to ensure the
prudent use of legal services by employees and board of trustees members and
the tracking of the use of those services;
3. Charter schools shall establish procedures
to effectively manage legal costs. Procedures may include:
i. A limitation on the number of contact
persons with the authority to request services or advice from contracted legal
counsel;
ii. Criteria or guidance
to prevent the use of legal counsel unnecessarily for management decisions or
readily available information contained in charter school materials such as
policies, administrative regulations, or guidance available through
professional source materials;
iii.
A provision that requests for legal advice shall be made in writing and shall
be maintained on file in the business office and a process to determine whether
the request warrants legal advice or if legal advice is necessary;
and
iv. A provision to maintain a
log of all legal counsel contact, including name of legal counsel contacted,
date of contact, issue discussed, and length of contact. Legal bills shall be
compared to the contact log and any variances shall be investigated and
resolved;
4. A provision
that requires that contracts for legal services comply with payment
requirements and restrictions pursuant to
N.J.S.A.
18A:19-1 et seq. and as follows:
i. Advance payments shall be
prohibited;
ii. Services to be
provided shall be described in detail in the contract;
iii. Invoices for payment shall itemize the
services provided for the billing period; and
iv. Payment shall be only for services
actually provided;
5.
Professional services contracts are issued in a deliberative and efficient
manner that ensures the charter school receives the highest quality services at
a fair and competitive price or through a shared service arrangement. This may
include, but is not limited to, issuance of such contracts through a request
for proposals (RFP) based on cost and other specified factors or other
comparable process; and
6.
Professional services contracts are limited to non-recurring or specialized
work for which the charter school does not possess adequate in-house resources
or in-house expertise to conduct.
i. Charter
schools are prohibited from contracting with legal counsel or using in-house
legal counsel to pursue any affirmative claim or cause of action on behalf of
charter school administrators and/or any individual board members for any claim
or cause of action in which the damages to be awarded would benefit an
individual rather than the charter school as a whole.
ii. Charter school publications shall be
produced and distributed in the most cost-efficient manner possible that will
enable the charter school to inform and educate the target community. The use
of expensive materials or production techniques where lower cost methods are
available and appropriate, such as the use of multi-color glossy publications
instead of suitable, less expensive alternatives, is prohibited.
iii. Public relations activities, such as
booths at Statewide conferences, marketing activities and celebrations for
opening schools and community events, and TV productions that are not part of
the instructional program or do not provide, in a cost-effective way,
information about charter school or board operations to the public, that are
excessive in nature are prohibited. All activities involving promotional
efforts to advance a particular position on elections or any referenda are
prohibited.
iv. Nothing in this
section shall preclude boards of trustees from accepting donations or volunteer
services from community members, local private education foundations, and local
business owners to conduct or assist in public relations services. Examples
include, but are not limited to:
(1) Providing
charter school flyers, newsletters, or other materials containing charter
school related information of public concern to local businesses, public
meeting places, or other local organizations to display or make available for
dissemination;
(2) Making charter
school related information of public concern available to local newspapers to
publish related articles; and
(3)
Utilizing volunteered services of local community members, charter school
employees, members of parent organizations, or local businesses with expertise
in related areas such as printing, advertising, publishing, or
journalism.
Disclaimer: These regulations may not be the most recent version. New Jersey may have more current or accurate information. We make no warranties or guarantees about the accuracy, completeness, or adequacy of the information contained on this site or the information linked to on the state site. Please check official sources.
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