In June 2011, the Union County Prosecutor's Office was investigating charges that members of the school board gave jobs and promotions to employees in exchange for political contributions. Republican members of the
New Jersey General Assembly asked for records relating to district spending for entertainment, travel, equipment and other expenditures. The Investigations Unit of the
New Jersey Department of Education reviewed district practices in 2008, following a state auditor's report that undocumented aliens were being improperly hired by the district in custodial and clerical positions. The district's business administrator indicated that the district had been hiring non-citizens for math and science teaching positions due to the inability to find qualified citizens qualified to work in those positions. Other findings had shown that $88,000 was spent by the district for what was deemed to be political advertising and that employee information had been taken from confidential files to be used for soliciting political contributions. Some other recent headlines include: • At least $1.5M paid out secretly by Elizabeth schools, a fraction of workers' settlements; • Elizabeth Board of Education used taxpayer money to keep lawsuits hush-hush; • Investigation finds Elizabeth school board pressures workers to fill campaign coffers; • Elizabeth school officials' kids don't pay full meal costs, records show; • Former Elizabeth Public Schools Equipment Manager Robert Firestone admitted that he conspired to defraud the school system through fraudulent business practices for his personal gain, according to the FBI and US Attorney's office.
2022 teacher union negotiations At the end of the 2021-22 school year, negotiations between the Elizabeth Education Association, the labor union representing teachers in the Elizabeth Public Schools, had its contract expired while both the Elizabeth School District and the EEA worked on negotiations, leading to no agreement by June 29 when negotiations ended. On August 24, 2022, Elizabeth mayor
Chris Bollwage threatened on Twitter to not give any promotions to teachers who if they go on strike. The tweet has to criticism from residents and staff members. During a board meeting of the Elizabeth Board of Education, EEA President John Griffin spoke to the board demanding that it respond to the Bollwage's Tweet, mentioning that state law does not have the power for the mayor to make staffing decisions and that mayor accused Griffin over planning a strike. ==References==