IN THE MATTER OF THE APPROVAL OF THE CHARTER AMENDMENT OF CENTRAL JERSEY COLLEGE PREP (NEW JERSEY DEPARTMENT OF EDUCATION) ( 2019 )


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  •                             NOT FOR PUBLICATION WITHOUT THE
    APPROVAL OF THE APPELLATE DIVISION
    This opinion shall not "constitute precedent or be binding upon any court." Although it is posted on the
    internet, this opinion is binding only on the parties in the case and its use in other cases is limited. R. 1:36-3.
    SUPERIOR COURT OF NEW JERSEY
    APPELLATE DIVISION
    DOCKET NO. A-3074-16T4
    IN THE MATTER OF THE APPROVAL
    OF THE CHARTER AMENDMENT OF
    CENTRAL JERSEY COLLEGE PREP
    __________________________________
    Argued May 30, 2019 – Decided June 7, 2019
    Before Judges Haas, Sumners and Mitterhoff.
    On appeal from the New Jersey Department of
    Education.
    William C. Morlok argued the cause for appellant
    Franklin Township School District (Parker McCay, PA,
    attorneys; Brett E.J. Gorman, of counsel and on the
    briefs; Kayleen Egan, on the briefs).
    Brenda C. Liss argued the cause for respondent Central
    Jersey College Prep Charter School (Riker Danzig
    Scherer Hyland & Perretti, LLP, attorneys; Brenda C.
    Liss, of counsel and on the brief; Stephen M. Turner,
    on the brief).
    Geoffrey N. Stark, Deputy Attorney General, argued
    the cause for respondent Department of Education
    (Gurbir S. Grewal, Attorney General, attorney; Melissa
    Dutton Schaffer, Assistant Attorney General, of
    counsel; James M. Esposito, Deputy Attorney General,
    on the brief).
    PER CURIAM
    Appellant Franklin Township Board of Education (Franklin) appeals from
    the February 28, 2017 final decision of the Commissioner of Education
    (Commissioner), approving an application by Central Jersey College Prep
    Charter School (CJCP) to amend its charter to increase enrollment, add a
    satellite campus, and move its main campus to a new facility. 1 We affirm.
    I.
    We begin by reciting the essential background facts and procedural history
    of this matter. CJCP is a charter school located in Franklin Township, Somerset
    County, with an approved "region of residence," 2 that includes Franklin
    1
    Calendared back-to-back with this appeal, North Brunswick Township Board
    of Education (North Brunswick), New Brunswick Board of Education (New
    Brunswick) and Piscataway Township Board of Education (Piscataway)
    separately appealed from this same decision. North Brunswick Twp. Bd. of
    Educ. v. Harrington (North Brunswick), No. A-3415-16. Two other appeals
    from decisions by the Commissioner regarding charter schools are also
    calendared back-to-back with this case. Highland Park Bd. of Educ. v.
    Harrington (Highland Park II), No. A-3455-16; Bd. of Educ. of the Twp. of
    Piscataway v. N.J. Dep't of Educ. (Piscataway), No. A-5427-16. Because of this
    overlap, the reader is encouraged to review all four of our opinions in these
    cases, which are being released simultaneously.
    2
    The term "region of residence" is defined as "contiguous school districts in
    which a charter school operates and is the charter school's district of residence."
    N.J.A.C. 6A:11-1.2.
    A-3074-16T4
    2
    Township, New Brunswick, and North Brunswick. The school began operation
    in 2006. It was approved under the Charter School Program Act of 1995,
    N.J.S.A. 18A:36A-1 to -18 (the Charter School Act or CSPA), to serve students
    in grades kindergarten through eighth, with a maximum enrollment of forty-
    eight students per grade, and a projected total enrollment of 624 students for the
    2019-2020 school year. Its mission is "to prepare its students for post-secondary
    education and beyond with the necessary skills and knowledge they need to
    intellectually and emotionally reach their maximum potential."
    CJCP is a high-performing, Tier 1 school, a ranking it received from the
    New Jersey Department of Education's (Department or NJDOE) assessment of
    its academic performance based on the metrics set forth in the State's Academic
    Performance Framework governing charter schools. 3          It was awarded the
    National Blue Ribbon Award in 2016, named a High Performing Title I Reward
    School in 2015, featured as a Top Performing High School in U.S. News and
    World Report in 2015 and 2016, and designated as a "Top Ten Middle School"
    by JerseyCAN in 2013.
    3
    The "Performance Framework" as referenced in N.J.A.C. 6A:11-2.3(b)(2), and
    as defined in N.J.A.C. 6A:11-1.2, sets specific quantitative and qualitative
    standards for academic, financial, and organizational performance.
    A-3074-16T4
    3
    Appellant Franklin Township Board of Education (Franklin) operates the
    traditional Franklin Township Public Schools (FTPS).         For the 2016-2017
    school year, approximately 7000 students from Franklin Township were
    enrolled in FTPS. Two charter schools also operate within the district, CJCP
    and Thomas Edison EnergySmart Charter School (TEECS). A third school,
    Ailanthus Charter School, received approval to begin operation for the 2018-
    2019 school year. In re Ailanthus Charter Sch., No. A-0945-16 (App. Div. May
    11, 2018). As of April 2017, 330 students from Franklin were enrolled in CJCP,
    311 students were enrolled in TEECS, and forty-eight students were enrolled in
    out-of-district charter schools (Hatikvah International Charter School
    (Hatikvah) and the Greater Brunswick Charter School).
    On December 1, 2016, CJCP submitted a charter amendment application
    seeking to: 1) expand its maximum enrollment from 624 to 1320 students by
    the 2019-2020 school year; 2) add a satellite campus in New Brunswick (within
    its region of residence) by the 2019-2020 school year; and 3) relocate the current
    facility to a new facility on Mettlers Road in Somerset. It proposed to enroll
    960 students at the Somerset campus and 360 students at the New Brunswick
    campus. In accord with N.J.A.C. 6A:11-2.6(a)(2), CJCP submitted a board
    resolution authorizing the request to amend, a copy of the proposed revisions to
    A-3074-16T4
    4
    the charter, and a rationale statement in support of the proposed amendment.
    CJCP stated that its need for expansion was "driven primarily by the heavy
    demand from the community to be a part of the educational success that it had
    instilled."   It represented that the number of applications had dramatically
    increased over the past few years, totaling 465 for the 2014-2015 school year,
    and 956 for the 2016-2017 school year. CJCP had, at the time of the application,
    628 students on its waiting list and was only able to accept approximately 25%
    of the application pool. Thus, it maintained that under the current maximum
    capacity of forty-eight students per grade, it was "unable to service the vast
    number of students who would benefit" from the education provided by the
    school.
    CJCP anticipated that demand for admission would continue to increase
    as a result of its awards, expansion, and proposed new facilities. It submitted
    student achievement results showing that in the spring of 2016, its students had
    significantly outperformed their peers attending FTPS in all PARCC
    assessments. For the 2016-2017 school year: 65% of their high school students
    were enrolled in at least one Advanced Placement (AP) class; 84% had taken
    college-level courses; and for the fifth consecutive year, 100% of the students
    had graduated high school and were accepted into a four-year college. Expanded
    A-3074-16T4
    5
    enrollment would allow it to increase its AP and college-level courses and to
    offer a wider range of extracurricular activities.
    If approved, CJCP planned to hire approximately twenty-eight new
    teachers, together with additional administrative staff to meet their staffing
    needs. Under the expansion, the school projected the following expenses for
    teacher salaries:    $2,572,388 (2017-2018); $3,081,559 (2018-2019); and
    $3,510,006 (2019-2020).
    CJCP also sought to amend its charter to add a satellite campus in New
    Brunswick "to increase opportunities of education equity for all students in its
    attendance zone." CJCP identified two facilities for consideration, but had not
    finalized its selection pending the approval to operate a satellite campus.
    CJCP asserted that the addition of the New Brunswick satellite campus
    would allow for the "accessibility and replication" of the school's "existing
    model to service this high-need community and the increased number of students
    attending [the] school," and would open the opportunities offered by CJCP to "a
    much larger student base in need of a college education." CJCP would also "be
    able to cut the costs within the schools by utilizing district-wide resources
    between the New Brunswick and Somerset campuses."
    Although CJCP served New Brunswick students, as part of its "region of
    A-3074-16T4
    6
    residence," it had received only ninety-three applications from families in New
    Brunswick for the 2016-2017 school year, of which sixteen students were
    enrolled through the lottery system, and seventy-seven students were placed on
    the waiting list. The applications from New Brunswick students for the 2016-
    2017 school year had doubled from the applications for the 2015-2016 school
    year, but were still less than expected given that there were no charter schools
    located in the city of New Brunswick. CJCP cited to studies that emphasized
    "the importance of residential proximity for charter schools to be a real option
    for parents," and expressed confidence that positioning the satellite campus in
    New Brunswick will increase the awareness of the school within the community
    and result in increased enrollment.
    If approved, CJCP represented that it would "run an enrollment campaign"
    to reach out to the entire New Brunswick community. "Brochures and fliers
    would be translated for non-English speakers and distributed to various
    organizations, including but not limited to places of worship, community
    centers, enrichment programs and service organizations." It would also hold
    open houses at the school and at other locations accessible to members of the
    community.
    CJCP projected that enrollment at the satellite campus would total:
    A-3074-16T4
    7
    Grade         2016-2017        2017-2018       2018-2019        2019-2020
    Grade 6            0                0               72               72
    Grade 7            0                0               72               72
    Grade 8            0                0               0                72
    Grade 9            0                0               72               72
    Grade 10           0                0               0                72
    Grade 11           0                0               0                0
    Grade 12           0                0               0                0
    Total             0                0              216              360
    Lastly, CJCP sought to relocate its main facility to an approximately
    90,000 square foot building located on Mettlers Road in Somerset.           CJCP
    acknowledged that part of the reason for the request to relocate was the fact that
    the current "landlord's recent and unreasonable actions and legal challenges have
    made it impossible to stay in [the current building] beyond this school year ." It
    also sought to relocate because the current facility did not provide enough space
    and amenities to accommodate its students. The new larger facility had fifty-
    five classrooms, a media center, cafeteria, auditorium, and conference rooms
    among other features. Further, although the rent for the new facility was higher,
    CJCP determined that considering "all factors" including legal expenses and
    maintenance costs, "the new facility will not significantly increase the
    percentage of the school's general fund allocated for the building/land rent and
    maintenance."
    CJCP projected that enrollment at the Somerset Campus would total:
    A-3074-16T4
    8
    Grade          2016-2017      2017-2018        2018-2019       2019-2020
    Kindergarten         48             72               96               96
    Grade 1            48             72               98               96
    Grade 2            48             72               96               96
    Grade 3                           48               72               96
    Grade 4                                            48               72
    Grade 5                                                             48
    Grade 6            48              72              96               96
    Grade 7            48              48              72               96
    Grade 8            48              48              48               72
    Grade 9            48              48              48               48
    Grade 10            48              48              48               48
    Grade 11            48              48              48               48
    Grade 12            48              48              48               48
    Total             480             624             816             960
    More than 100 individuals and organizations sent letters to the
    Commissioner supporting CJCP's application, including the Latino Leadership
    Alliance of New Jersey, which expressed its "strong support" for the application.
    On January 13, 2017, Franklin submitted a letter to the Commissioner
    asking her to deny CJCP's application.         It claimed that CJCP had not
    demonstrated that it could meet the challenges posed by its rapid expansion,
    including tripling its current enrollment and opening two new facilities.
    Franklin maintained that this "ill-advised amendment" threatened "the
    educational viability of CJCP's students." It asked the Commissioner to deny
    the application, or in the alternative, to reduce the "proposed increase in
    enrollment and facilities."
    Franklin claimed that CJCP had not allocated sufficient funds to attract
    A-3074-16T4
    9
    and adequately staff its schools with competent professionals, which would
    result in "catastrophic consequences to the viability of the school and the
    delivery of educational services." It calculated that the new teachers would
    receive an average salary of $33,486.35 per year ($937,618 (budget increase for
    teacher salaries) ÷ 28 (new teachers)). That annual salary for new teachers was
    significantly less than CJCP's median staff salary of $49,200 for the 2015-2016
    school year. As a result, Franklin asserted that CJCP would "struggle to find
    qualified teachers to run a rigorous college preparatory curriculum." Franklin
    also maintained that CJCP's staffing goal for its Somerset campus did not
    comport with its stated goal of small class sizes and a low teacher-student ratio
    because it would not be fully staffed for several years after the increased
    enrollment.
    Moreover, Franklin alleged that there was insufficient community demand
    for the expansion, because the lack of applications from New Brunswick
    families for the Somerset campus did not necessarily mean that there was
    community support for a satellite campus in New Brunswick. Further, CJCP
    sought to "expand enrollment in Somerset despite the fact[] that only 87% of the
    students enrolled at the CJCP Somerset campus reside in the district of
    residence."   Franklin asserted that CJCP's "argument that more seats are
    A-3074-16T4
    10
    necessary in Somerset to meet the demand seems illogical since 13% of the
    students currently attending CJCP reside in a town outside the district of
    residence."
    Next, Franklin asserted that CJCP had "a poor track record" with English
    Language Learners (ELL). It argued that as of the 2014-2015 school year, CJCP
    had not enrolled any ELL students, in contrast to the Franklin Township school
    district, which had 600 ELL students.
    Lastly, Franklin had concerns relating to the suitability of the Mettlers
    Road facility. According to Franklin, the facility was apparently located in a
    ROL Zone (Research/Office/Laboratory Zone), where schools were not a
    permitted use.    Although the Planning Board ultimately approved CJCP's
    application for a use variance, it imposed "significant conditions" on the project,
    which Franklin asserted "undermine[d] its viability as a school location."
    Moreover, CJCP's proposed location for a gymnasium was "located within the
    setback of a gas transmission pipeline, potentially exposing the students to a
    dangerous condition."
    CJCP also only intended to use approximately one-half of the existing
    Mettlers Road facility, leaving the remainder vacant and available for lease.
    Thus, the property owner could lease the balance of the building to a commercial
    A-3074-16T4
    11
    office or research laboratory, thereby potentially "creating a number of security
    risks for the students, who would be forced to share a building." Franklin also
    noted that CJCP's proposal to move its main facility had resulted in
    "threatened/pending litigation" with its current landlord.
    On January 27, 2018, the Superintendents of Edison, Highland Park, New
    Brunswick, Sayreville, South River, and Metuchen Township Public School
    Districts submitted a letter to the Commissioner opposing the applications filed
    by CJCP, Hatikvah, and TEECS, to expand their enrollments. They alleged that
    Hatikvah and TEECS, but not CJCP, "enroll a significantly more segregated
    student body than any of the resident or non-resident sending districts with
    respect to race, socioeconomic status, and need for special education."
    Boards of Educations from ten other school districts, including the
    appellants in the companion appeal, North Brunswick, No. A-3415-16, passed
    almost identical resolutions calling for a general moratorium on new charter
    school seats in Middlesex and Somerset Counties. The Boards also alleged that
    Hatikvah and TEECS, but not CJCP, enrolled a "significantly more segregated
    student body" than any of the resident or non-resident sending districts.
    By letter dated January 31, 2017, CJCP responded to each of Franklin's
    claims. With regard to Franklin's argument that the "existing charter schools
    A-3074-16T4
    12
    located in Middlesex and Somerset counties are already lacking in demand in
    their own designated communities," CJCP stated that it had "been experiencing
    an increase in demand for enrollment from students living within its sending
    district." It asserted that the number of applicants from its region of residence
    totaled: 302 (2014-2015); 684 (2015-2016); and 734 (2016-2017). For the
    2017-2018 school year, CJCP had received 748 applications as of January 2017,
    and anticipated receiving over 1200 applications by the 2017-2018 school year
    deadline.
    With regard to Franklin's claim that only 87% of the students enrolled in
    CJCP resided in the school's region of residence, CJCP explained that that
    number was "a result of upperclassmen high school students from outside of the
    attendance zone who started to attend CJCP when they were sixth graders. CJCP
    pointed out that as these students graduated, the ratio of students from CJCP's
    region of residence had increased," as follows: 71% (2014-2015); 80% (2015-
    2016); 87% (2016-2017). As a result, CJCP anticipated that approximately 94%
    of its students would reside in its region of residence in the 2017-2018 school
    year, and 100% by the 2018-2019 school year.
    Lastly, CJCP stated that Franklin's claim that TEECS and Hatikvah
    enrolled a more segregated student body was a tacit admission that CJCP's
    A-3074-16T4
    13
    student body was representative of its sending districts. CJCP represented that
    the demographics of its students were: 14% (White); 17% (Hispanic); 30%
    (African American); 38% (Asian); and 1% (other).
    By letter dated February 10, 2017, the Latino Coalition of New Jersey, a
    civil rights organization, and Franklin C.A.R.E.S., a group of parents of FTPS
    students, informed the Commissioner that they had filed a federal civil rights
    complaint against CJCP, alleging that CJCP engaged in segregative practices
    relating to enrollment of students with disabilities and ELL students.4 CJCP
    responded to the allegations the next day, and "vehemently" denied engaging in
    any form of discrimination. CJCP stated it was an inclusive and diverse school
    that, for the past ten years, had been "successfully educating students from
    Franklin Township, North Brunswick and New Brunswick under the strict
    regulatory oversight of the NJDOE," and was in "complete compliance with all
    NJDOE regulations regarding enrollment policies."
    CJCP explained that it solicited and accepted applications from all
    interested students. Students gained enrollment through a publicly held random
    lottery process that blindly selected a certain number of students to fill available
    4
    Franklin did not include the letter or the complaint in its appendices. It also
    provided no information concerning the outcome, if any, of this litigation.
    A-3074-16T4
    14
    seats. Importantly, CJCP did not collect any information at the time of the
    application as to the students' socioeconomic and ethnic background, disability
    status, or English language skills. Any disparity in demographics of its student
    enrollment, as compared to FTPS, was "completely attributable to parent-
    choice." Further, the request to open a satellite campus in New Brunswick was
    "specifically designed to give more ethnically diverse, economically
    disadvantaged, and ELL students access to a high quality, public education ."
    Lastly, CJCP claimed that it had "raised the bar of what should be
    expected in public education in Franklin Township with a proven track record
    of academic success." Its students had outperformed their peers in FTPS in
    every subject, as represented by the 2016 PARCC test results:
    2016 PARCC Results – All Students
    100                                                              91.1
    73.2                      77.3
    80
    63.2                     60.6
    51
    60                                                               44            47
    42                                                                    CJCP
    40                                     26.4          30.3                           Franklin
    24
    20
    0
    Algebra I    Geometry    Algebra II     Math-MS       ELA-MS      ELA-HS
    A-3074-16T4
    15
    2016 PARCC ELA Results - Free/Reduced Lunch Students
    100     83.4
    74.5             78.5
    50             30.9             33.2            32     CJCP
    Franklin
    0
    ELA-MS         ELA-HS             All
    2016 PARCC Math Results - Free/Reduced Lunch Students
    100
    61.1
    47.6             50.7
    50                                                     CJCP
    20.3          20.8              20.5
    Franklin
    0
    Math-MS        Math-HS           All
    On February 28, 2017, the Commissioner granted CJCP's application to
    amend its charter based on the recommendations and her review of the record.
    In a brief written decision, the Commissioner noted that the Department had
    "completed a comprehensive review including, but not limited to, student
    performance on statewide assessments, operational stability, fiscal viability,
    public comment, fiscal impact on sending districts, and other information in
    order to make a decision regarding the school's amendment request." The
    Commissioner confirmed the school's maximum enrollment for the "approved
    region of residence of Franklin, New Brunswick and North Brunswick," as
    A-3074-16T4
    16
    follows:
    Grade       2017-2018        2018-2019       2019-2020
    Kindergarten      72               96               96
    Grade 1         72               96               96
    Grade 2         72               96               96
    Grade 3         48               72               96
    Grade 4                          48               72
    Grade 5                                           48
    Grade 6           72            168              168
    Grade 7           48            144              168
    Grade 8           48             48              144
    Grade 9           48            120              120
    Grade 10           48             48              120
    Grade 11           48             48               48
    Grade 12           48             48               48
    Total           624            1032            1320
    The Commissioner also confirmed the new site location at Mettlers Road,
    and directed CJCP to "provide all facility related documents to the Office of
    Charter and Renaissance Schools and the Somerset County Office of
    Education." Further, the Commissioner directed that once CJCP had identified
    the final site of the satellite campus, it should provide the Department with the
    required amended documentation pursuant to N.J.A.C. 6A:11-2.6. This appeal
    followed.
    On appeal, Franklin raises the following contentions:
    POINT I
    THE COMMISSIONER'S DECISION SHOULD BE
    REVERSED   BECAUSE   SHE   FAILED  TO
    CONSIDER THE SEGREGATIVE IMPACT CJCP'S
    A-3074-16T4
    17
    CHARTER AMENDMENT WOULD HAVE ON THE
    DISTRICT.
    POINT II
    THE   COMMISSIONER'S  DECISION                     WAS
    ARBITRARY,      CAPRICIOUS,                        AND
    UNREASONABLE.
    II.
    In Point I, Franklin argues that the Commissioner's decision was arbitrary,
    capricious and unreasonable because she failed to consider the alleged
    segregative impact of CJCP's charter amendment on the district. We disagree.
    The scope of judicial review of a final decision of the Commissioner on a
    charter school application is limited. In re Proposed Quest Acad. Charter Sch.
    of Montclair Founders Grp., 
    216 N.J. 370
    , 385 (2013). We may reverse only if
    the Commissioner's decision is "arbitrary, capricious, or unreasonable." 
    Ibid.
    In making that determination, our review is generally restricted to three
    inquiries:
    (1) whether the agency's action violates express or
    implied legislative policies, that is, did the agency
    follow the law; (2) whether the record contains
    substantial evidence to support the findings on which
    the agency based its action; and (3) whether in applying
    the legislative policies to the facts, the agency clearly
    erred in reaching a conclusion that could not reasonably
    have been made on a showing of the relevant factors.
    A-3074-16T4
    18
    [Id. at 385-86 (quoting Mazza v. Bd. of Trs., 
    143 N.J. 22
    , 25 (1995)).]
    "When an agency's decision meets those criteria, then a court owes
    substantial deference to the agency's expertise and superior knowledge of a
    particular field." In re Herrmann, 
    192 N.J. 19
    , 28 (2007). This court "may not
    substitute its own judgment for the agency's even though the court might have
    reached a different result. . . ." In re Carter, 
    191 N.J. 474
    , 483 (2007) (quoting
    Greenwood v. State Police Training Ctr., 
    127 N.J. 500
    , 513 (1992)).
    Charter schools are public schools that operate under a charter granted by
    the Commissioner, operate independently of a local board of education, and are
    managed by a board of trustees. N.J.S.A. 18A:36A-3(a). The Legislature found
    and declared that
    the establishment of charter schools as part of this
    State’s program of public education can assist in
    promoting comprehensive educational reform by
    providing a mechanism for the implementation of a
    variety of educational approaches which may not be
    available in the traditional public school classroom.
    Specifically, charter schools offer the potential to
    improve pupil learning; increase for students and
    parents the educational choices available when
    selecting the learning environment which they feel may
    be the most appropriate; encourage the use of different
    and innovative learning methods; establish a new form
    of accountability for schools; require the measurement
    of learning outcomes; make the school the unit for
    A-3074-16T4
    19
    educational improvement; and establish                new
    professional opportunities for teachers.
    The Legislature further finds that the
    establishment of a charter school program is in the best
    interests of the students of this State and it is therefore
    the public policy of the State to encourage and facilitate
    the development of charter schools.
    [N.J.S.A. 18A:36A-2.]
    It is well established that, "[r]ooted in our Constitution, New Jersey's
    public policy prohibits segregation in our public schools. . . ." In re Grant of
    Charter Sch. Application of Englewood on the Palisades Charter Sch., 
    164 N.J. 316
    , 324 (2000). In that regard, the CSPA provides that "[t]he admission policy
    of the charter school shall, to the maximum extent practicable, seek the
    enrollment of a cross section of the community’s school age population
    including racial and academic factors." N.J.S.A. 18A:36A-8(e). See N.J.A.C.
    6A:11-4.5(e) (charter school lottery). Further, N.J.S.A. 18A:36A-7 provides:
    A charter school shall be open to all students on a space
    available basis and shall not discriminate in its
    admission policies or practices on the basis of
    intellectual or athletic ability, measures of achievement
    or aptitude, status as a person with a disability,
    proficiency in the English language, or any other basis
    that would be illegal if used by a school district;
    however, a charter school may limit admission to a
    particular grade level or to areas of concentration of the
    school, such as mathematics, science, or the arts. A
    charter school may establish reasonable criteria to
    A-3074-16T4
    20
    evaluate prospective students which shall be outlined in
    the school’s charter.
    Our Supreme Court has held that the "form and structure" of the
    segregative analysis under the CSPA is up to the Commissioner and the
    Department to determine. Englewood, 
    164 N.J. at 329
    . "The Commissioner
    must consider the impact that the movement of pupils to a charter school would
    have on the district of residence" and "be prepared to act if the de facto effect of
    a charter school were to affect a racial balance precariously maintained in a
    charter school's district of residence." 
    Id. at 328
    . "The Commissioner must
    vigilantly seek to protect a district's racial/ethnic balance during the charter
    school's initial application, continued operation, and charter renewal
    application." In re Red Bank Charter Sch., 
    367 N.J. Super. 462
    , 472 (App. Div.
    2004).
    [S]egregation, however caused, must be addressed. To
    be timely addressed, assessment cannot wait until after
    a charter school has been approved for operation and is
    already taking pupils from the public schools of a
    district of residence. The Commissioner must assess
    whether approval of a charter school will have a
    segregative effect on the district of residence of the
    charter school. Once a charter school is operating, the
    Commissioner must also assess whether there is a
    segregative effect in any other district sending pupils to
    the approved charter school.
    [Englewood, 
    164 N.J. at 330
    .]
    A-3074-16T4
    21
    In response to the Court's decision in Englewood, and to its companion
    case, In re Greater Brunswick Charter School, 
    164 N.J. 314
    , 315 (2000), the
    Board adopted regulations requiring the Commissioner, prior to approval of a
    charter, N.J.A.C. 6A:11-2.1(j), and on an annual basis thereafter, N.J.A.C.
    6A:11-2.2(c), to "assess the student composition of a charter school and the
    segregative effect that the loss of the students may have on its district of
    residence. The assessment shall be based on the enrollment from the initial
    recruitment period pursuant to N.J.A.C. 6A:11-4.4(a) and (b)."          32 N.J.R.
    3560(a), 3561 (Oct. 2, 2000).    N.J.A.C. 6A:11-4.4(a) provides that "a charter
    school shall submit to the Commissioner the number of students by grade level,
    gender and race/ethnicity from each district selected for enrollment from its
    initial recruitment period for the following school year."
    Moreover, in response to a public comment about the readoption of the
    implementing regulations with amendments, the Commissioner explained that:
    20. COMMENT: The commenter requested revisions
    to N.J.A.C. 6A:11-2.1 and 2.2 to ensure the Department
    assesses the segregative effects of charter schools not
    only by race, but also on religion, ethnicity and gender,
    students with disabilities, English language learner
    status, low-income students (socioeconomic status),
    and students at risk of dropping out or with other
    special academic needs.
    A-3074-16T4
    22
    RESPONSE: The Department assesses the segregative
    effects of charter schools by many factors other than
    race, including those referenced by the commenter,
    although it is not specifically required by or enumerated
    in N.J.A.C. 6A:11-2.1 and 2.2. The factors that are
    considered are predicated on the composition of the
    involved school districts. In light of this fact specific
    analysis, the Department contends revisions to N.J.A.C.
    6A:11-2.1 and/or 2.2 are not necessary or warranted.
    [46 N.J.R. 2351(c), 2353 (Dec. 1, 2014).]
    On appeal, Franklin claims that CJCP is not representative of a cross
    section of the community's school age population because it over-enrolls Asian
    students, and under-enrolls Hispanic students, economically disadvantaged
    students (defined as students receiving free or reduced cost lunch), ELL
    students, and special needs students.       However, before the Commissioner,
    Franklin only asserted that CJCP had a "poor track record" with ELL students,
    and presented no evidence to the Commissioner regarding the racial and
    economic segregative effects of CJCP's increased enrollment.
    Further, the other opposing districts included data regarding the
    segregative effect of two different charter schools, but not CJCP, and there is no
    indication in this record whether the Latino Coalition and Franklin C.A.R.E.S
    presented any substantiated evidence of a segregative effect on the district.
    Thus, there was nothing in this record to support Franklin's assertion that CJCP's
    A-3074-16T4
    23
    enrollment practices will have a segregative effect on the district. Red Bank,
    
    367 N.J. Super. at 472-85
    .
    It was also undisputed that CJCP did not discriminate in its admission
    policies or practices. In accordance with the CSPA, CJCP operated a publicly-
    held random race-blind lottery. In addition, CJCP did not collect any data at the
    time of the application about the students' socioeconomic and ethnic
    background, disability status, and English language skills.
    Additionally, even if Franklin had presented the information about student
    enrollment data to the Commissioner at the time she was considering CJCP's
    application, it would not have presented a basis to reject the application.
    Franklin compared the racial/ethnic demographics of CJCP and TEECS (not a
    party to this appeal) students, with FTPS students for the school year 2016-2017,
    as follows:
    Demographic                   FTPS Students CJCP Students TEECS Students
    White                                 12.8%         13.3%            14.7%
    Asian                                 16.0%         34.0%            67.6%
    Hispanic                              25.4%         18.8%             3.5%
    Black                                 37.4%         31.1%            12.6%
    Free or reduced price lunch           47.7%         28.0%             7.0%
    Special Education                     16.0%          8.0%             3.0%
    ELL or LEP                             7.0%            0%             3.0%
    It also cited to the change in CJCP's demographics, as follows:
    A-3074-16T4
    24
    CJCP's                2011-2012   2012-2013   2013-2014   2014-2015     2015-2016
    Demographics
    White                      6.6%        8.0%        9.5%         12.0%       13.3%
    Asian                      5.7%        7.7%       15.4%         19.6%       34.0%
    Hispanic                  20.4%       21.4%       20.9%         20.3%       18.8%
    Black                     66.7%       62.3%       53.9%         47.5%       31.1%
    Economically              33.0%       44.0%       43.0%         39.0%       28.0%
    disadvantaged
    ELL or LEP                   0%          0%          0%           0%           0%
    Special education          8.0%        9.0%        7.0%         7.0%         8.0%
    The demographics cited by Franklin do not present a sufficient basis for
    assessing segregative effect. The data provided shows some disparity between
    the enrollment of Asian, Hispanic, economically disadvantaged, and ELL
    students in FTPS. Significantly, however, Franklin does not argue that FTPS
    are becoming more segregated, and in fact, the data submitted by the
    Commissioner indicates that they have not. See Bd. of Educ. of Morris Sch.
    Dist. v. Unity Charter Sch., EDU 1797-02, final decision, (May 22, 2003)
    ("student population for purposes of comparison with a charter school is not the
    public school enrollment of the district of residence, but 'the community's school
    age population,' a group for which no comparison can here be made, since the
    present record is virtually devoid of information about it").
    As the Commissioner correctly points out, the District's student
    demographics, including socioeconomic and racial demographics, have, as set
    forth below, remained relatively static from the 2010-2011 to the 2015-2016
    A-3074-16T4
    25
    school year, and thus there was no indication that CJCP's operations were
    exacerbating the racial imbalance:
    Students                    Franklin             Franklin
    Pre-K to 12                 2010-2011            2016-2017
    White                       18.7%                13.7%
    Black or African American   40.3%                38.0%
    Asian                       18.4%                16.7%
    Hispanic                    21.5%                29.5%
    LEP                         5.1%                 7.8%
    Special needs               15.2%                16.0%
    Free or reduced lunch       36.6%                45.0%
    A comparison of the demographic data indicates that CJCP enrolled a
    diverse student population, albeit, a population that did not exactly match FTPS
    demographics.    Moreover, CJCP maintained that the expansion and the
    operation of a satellite campus in New Brunswick would allow it to develop an
    even more diverse student population. To that end, Franklin has not presented
    any evidence that the District was becoming more segregated, or that CJCP's
    existence has worsened the existing racial imbalance. See Bd. of Educ. of
    Hoboken v. N.J. State Dep't of Educ., No. A-3690-14 (slip op. at 15) (App. Div.
    June 29, 2017) (affirmed charter renewal where there were no allegations that
    the school's practices after the enrollment of students by an impartial lottery
    exacerbated the racial or ethnic balance); see also In re Renewal Application of
    TEAM Acad. Charter Sch., ___ N.J. Super. ___, ___ (slip op. at 14) (stating that
    "[t]he mere fact that the demographics of the charter schools do not mirror the
    A-3074-16T4
    26
    demographics of the [d]istrict does not alone establish a segregative effect .").
    In that regard, this case is distinguishable from Red Bank, 
    367 N.J. Super. at 462
    .   In that case, the Board of Education (Board) appealed from the
    Commissioner's decision approving an application by a charter school to renew
    its charter. 
    Id. at 467
    . The Board opposed the application on the basis that the
    school's operation had worsened the racial/ethnic imbalance, citing to data
    showing that since the charter school opened, the percentage of non-minority
    students in the traditional public schools had decreased from 32% to 18%, and
    a disproportionate number of non-minority students were enrolled in the charter
    school. 
    Id. at 469
    . The Board also alleged that prior to standardized testing, the
    charter school frequently returned enrolled minority students with poor
    academic records to the traditional public schools. 
    Id. at 479
    .
    The Commissioner in Red Bank did not specifically address the
    segregation argument below. 
    Id. at 476
    . However, this court discerned from
    the entire record, including the Commissioner's brief on appeal, that the
    Commissioner had concluded there was "no evidence in the record to suggest
    that the charter school has promoted racial segregation among the district's
    school-age children," and "there is no requirement that the two schools have
    exactly the same minority/non-minority enrollment figures." 
    Ibid.
     (internal
    A-3074-16T4
    27
    quotation marks omitted). We held that "the Commissioner is to assess whether
    or not the charter school is seeking 'a cross section of the community's school
    age population.'" 
    Ibid.
     (quoting N.J.S.A. 18A:36A-8(e)).
    Despite the disparity in the enrollment, we affirmed the Commissioner's
    decision, finding that:
    The Charter School should not be faulted for
    developing an attractive educational program.
    Assuming the school's enrollment practices remain
    color blind, random, and open to all students in the
    community, the parents of age eligible students will
    decide whether or not to attempt to enroll their child in
    the Charter School and any racial/ethnic imbalance
    cannot be attributed solely to the school. To close this
    school would undermine the Legislature's policy of
    "promoting comprehensive educational reform" by
    fostering the development of charter schools. N.J.S.A.
    18A:36A-2.
    [Id. at 478.]
    Nonetheless, this court found that the school's post-enrollment practices
    were "disturbing and difficult to dismiss on this record."              
    Id. at 480
    .
    Additionally,
    [w]hile the Charter School's enrollment practices might
    not be the sole cause of existing racial/ethnic
    imbalance, the manner of operation of the school after
    its color-blind lottery, warrants closer scrutiny to
    determine whether some of the school's practices may
    be worsening the existing racial/ethnic imbalance in the
    district schools.
    A-3074-16T4
    28
    [Ibid.]
    Thus, we remanded the matter to the Commissioner to determine "whether
    any remedial action is warranted." 
    Id. at 482
    . Here, and unlike in Red Bank,
    there are no allegations that CJCP's practices, after the enrollment of students
    by an impartial lottery, exacerbated the racial, ethnic, or special needs balance
    in FTPS. Franklin does not cite to any policy or procedure utilized by CJCP in
    a manner to further exacerbate that balance. Instead, Franklin simply claimed,
    in general terms, that CJCP was more segregated than the FTPS—a claim
    insufficient to warrant further review on an application to amend.
    This case is also distinguishable from two other cases cited by Franklin.
    In In re Petition for Authorization to Conduct a Referendum on the Withdrawal
    of North Haledon School District from the Passaic County Manchester Regional
    High School District, 
    181 N.J. 161
    , 183 (2004), the Court reversed the grant of
    North Haledon's petition to withdraw from the Passaic County Manchester
    Regional High School District. The Court found that "demographic trends are
    contributing to a steady decrease in the number of white students attending
    Manchester Regional, and that North Haledon's withdrawal will accelerate this
    trend." 
    Ibid.
     The Court held that "[r]ather than using the demographic trend as
    an excuse for approving North Haledon's petition, the Board should have
    A-3074-16T4
    29
    considered the ameliorative effect of denying the petition on the racial balance
    at Manchester Regional." 
    Ibid.
    Similarly, in Board of Education of Englewood Cliffs v. Board of
    Education of Englewood, 
    257 N.J. Super. 413
    , 459-65 (App. Div. 1992), aff'd,
    
    132 N.J. 327
    , cert. denied, 
    510 U.S. 991
     (1993), the Appellate Division affirmed
    the State Board of Education's denial of Englewood Cliffs' petition to withdraw
    from the sending/receiving relationship due to the substantial negative impact
    on the racial balance in the district. In contrast, here, Franklin did not show that
    CJCP's expansion will increase the racial imbalance as in North Haledon and
    Englewood Cliffs.      In fact, it appears from the data submitted by the
    Commissioner that the racial demographics have remained fairly consistent
    during CJCP's operation.
    Lastly, it is undisputed that the Commissioner considered the segregative
    effect of the charter school in approving CJCP's application to open the school
    in 2006, N.J.A.C. 6A:11-2.1(j), in renewing its application in 2010 and 2015,
    N.J.A.C. 6A:11-2.3(b)(8), and on an annual basis, N.J.A.C. 6A:11-2.2(c). There
    is no indication in this record that there was any challenge based on the
    segregative effect either in the initial approval or on renewal. Nor is there any
    indication in this record that the Commissioner found a segregative effect during
    A-3074-16T4
    30
    the annual review. N.J.A.C. 6A:11-2.2(c).
    Based upon the foregoing, we conclude that the Commissioner's decision
    granting the expansion was not arbitrary, capricious, or unreasonable because
    Franklin did not provide sufficient evidence of a segregative effect to warrant
    either a more detailed scrutiny or the denial of the application. Therefore, we
    reject Franklin's contention on this point.
    III.
    In Point II, Franklin argues that the Commissioner's decision approving
    the amendment was arbitrary, capricious and unreasonable because she failed to
    consider "serious deficiencies       and problems in    CJCP's    application."
    Specifically, Franklin contends the Commissioner failed to consider that:
    1) CJCP sought to expand too rapidly; 2) CJCP's staffing plan was unrealistic;
    3) there was a lack of community demand for the New Brunswick campus and
    no demonstrated need for additional seats at the Somerset campus; 4) CJCP has
    a "poor track record" with ELL students; 5) the proposed location of the
    Somerset campus is unsuitable for a school; and 6) CJCP may become involved
    in expensive litigation with its current landlord. We are unpersuaded by these
    arguments.
    Applications to establish a charter school are governed by N.J.S.A.
    A-3074-16T4
    31
    18A:36A-4 and -5, and the implementing regulation, N.J.A.C. 6A:11-2.1. The
    Commissioner has final authority to grant or reject a charter. N.J.S.A. 18A:36A-
    4(c).   "The notification to eligible applicants not approved as charter schools
    shall include reasons for the denials." N.J.A.C. 6A:11-2.1(f) (emphasis added).
    Applications to renew a charter are governed by N.J.S.A. 18A:36A-17 and
    the implementing regulation, N.J.A.C. 6A:11-2.3. The Commissioner shall
    grant or deny the renewal of a charter based upon a comprehensive review of
    the school, including, among other things, the annual reports, recommendation
    of the district board of education or school superintendent, and student
    performance on statewide tests. N.J.A.C. 6A:11-2.3. "The notification to a
    charter school that is not granted a renewal shall include reasons for the denial."
    N.J.A.C. 6A:11-2.3(d) (emphasis added).
    With particular reference to the case at hand, a charter school can also
    apply to the Commissioner for an amendment to its charter. N.J.A.C. 6A:11-
    2.6. A charter school can seek, as in this case, an expansion of enrollment and
    the establishment of a new satellite campus. N.J.A.C. 6A:11-2.6(a)(1)(i), (iv).
    Boards of Education in the district of residence can submit comments in
    response to the application for amendment. N.J.A.C. 6A:11-2.6(c).
    "The Commissioner may approve or deny amendment requests of charter
    A-3074-16T4
    32
    schools and shall notify charter schools of decisions.        If approved, the
    amendment becomes effective immediately unless a different effective date is
    established by the Commissioner." N.J.A.C. 6A:11-2.6(d). In determining
    whether the amendments are eligible for approval, the Department "shall
    evaluate the amendments" based on the CSPA and the implementing regulations,
    and the Commissioner "shall review a charter school's performance data. . . ."
    N.J.A.C. 6A:11-2.6(b). A school's performance data is reflected in the school's
    Academic Performance Framework report.            N.J.A.C. 6A:11-1.2.        The
    Performance Framework consists of three sections: academic, financial, and
    organizational. N.J.A.C. 6A:11-1.2. A charter school’s performance on the
    Academic section carries the most weight. That component includes measures
    of student growth, achievement, graduation rate, and attendance.        N.J.A.C.
    6A:11-1.2.
    An appellate court may reverse a Commissioner's decision on a charter
    school application only if it is "arbitrary, capricious, or unreasonable." Quest
    Acad., 216 N.J. at 385. "[T]he arbitrary, capricious, or unreasonable standard
    . . . subsumes the need to find sufficient support in the record to sustain the
    decision reached by the Commissioner." Id. at 386. "[A] failure to consider all
    the evidence in a record would perforce lead to arbitrary decision making." Ibid.
    A-3074-16T4
    33
    However, in cases where "the Commissioner is not acting in a quasi-judicial
    capacity," and is instead acting in [her] legislative capacity, as [s]he was doing
    here, [s]he "need not provide the kind of formalized findings and conclusions
    necessary in the traditional contested case." TEAM Acad., ___ N.J. Super. ___
    (slip op. at 30) (quoting In re Grant of Charter Sch. Application of Englewood
    on the Palisades Charter Sch., 
    320 N.J. Super. 174
    , 217 (App. Div. 1999), aff'd
    as modified, 
    164 N.J. 316
     (2000)).
    Thus, although the arbitrary, capricious, or unreasonable standard
    demands "that the reasons for the decision be discernible, the reasons need not
    be as detailed or formalized as an agency adjudication of disputed facts; they
    need only be inferable from the record considered by the agency." Englewood,
    
    320 N.J. Super. at 217
    . See Red Bank, 
    367 N.J. Super. at 476
     (reasons need not
    be detailed or formalized, but must be discernible from the record); Bd. of Educ.
    of E. Windsor Reg'l Sch. Dist. v. State Bd. of Educ., 
    172 N.J. Super. 547
    , 552
    (App. Div. 1980) (detailed findings not required by Commissioner in reducing
    amount local school board sought to increase its budget).
    There is also no statutory or regulatory provision requiring the
    Commissioner to include reasons for granting an application to amend. TEAM
    Acad., ___ N.J. Super. ___ (slip op. at 40). The regulations provide only that
    A-3074-16T4
    34
    the notification "shall include reasons for the denial[]" of an initial charter
    school application and an application for renewal.       N.J.A.C. 6A:11-2.1(f);
    N.J.A.C. 6A:11-2.3(d).     The Commissioner does however, take comments
    regarding the amendment into consideration when rendering a final decision.
    N.J.A.C. 6A:11-2.6(c). Here, although the Commissioner did not specifically
    address the comments submitted by Franklin in its opposition to CJCP's
    application, a review of the record indicates that none of the issues raised by
    Franklin presented a basis to deny the amendment.
    First, Franklin argues that CJCP failed to present sufficient evidence of a
    need for a satellite campus in New Brunswick. A charter school can seek an
    amendment to open a new satellite campus. N.J.A.C. 6A:11-2.6(a)(1)(iv). See
    Educ. Law Ctr. ex rel. Burke v. N.J. State Bd. of Educ., 
    438 N.J. Super. 108
    ,
    112 (App. Div. 2014) (affirmed State Board's action in adopting regulations
    allowing satellite campuses). A satellite campus is defined as "a school facility
    operated by a charter school that is in addition to the facility identified in the
    charter school application or charter, if subsequently amended."        N.J.A.C.
    6A:11-1.2. "A charter school may operate more than one satellite campus in its
    district or region of residence, subject to charter amendment approval, pursuant
    to N.J.A.C. 6A:11-2.6." N.J.A.C. 6A:11-4.15(b).
    A-3074-16T4
    35
    The Department evaluates whether amendments are eligible for approval
    based on the CSPA. N.J.A.C. 6A:11-2.6(b). Under the CSPA, a charter must
    include information showing a "[d]emonstration of need" in its initial
    application for a charter. N.J.A.C. 6A:11-2.1(b)(2)(vi). Franklin contends that
    CJCP did not demonstrate a need for the satellite campus because it cited only
    to a lack of demand from New Brunswick families.
    However, in its application, CJCP presented a detailed rationale for the
    addition of a satellite campus—a record that amply supports the Commissioner's
    decision.   Notably, CJCP set forth that New Brunswick's high percentage of
    economically disadvantaged students (86% (high school) and 93% (middle
    school)), would benefit from easier access to CJCP. It also cited to studies that
    "emphasize[d] the importance of residential proximity for charter schools to be
    a real option for all parents."
    Moreover, CJCP demonstrated need because even though it received
    fewer applications than expected from New Brunswick students in 2016-2017,
    it still received double the number of applications from 2015-2016, and seventy-
    seven of the ninety-three students were placed on the waiting list. CJCP also
    represented that the total number of applications had dramatically increased over
    the past few years (465 for the 2014-2015 school year and 956 for the 2016-
    A-3074-16T4
    36
    2017 school year), and that at the time of the application, there were 628 students
    on its waiting list.
    Second, Franklin argues that CJCP failed to demonstrate need because
    only 87% of the students enrolled at the Somerset campus were from CJCP's
    region of residence. However, CJCP explained that number was "a result of
    upperclassmen high school students from outside of the attendance zone who
    started to attend CJCP when they were sixth graders. As these students graduate,
    the ratio of students from CJCP's region of residence attending CJCP has
    increased," as follows: 71% (2014-2015); 80% (2015-2016); 87% (2016-2017).
    CJCP anticipated that approximately 94% of its students would reside in its
    region of residence in the 2017-2018 school year, and 100% by the 2018-2019
    school year.
    Third, Franklin argues that the Commissioner ignored the fact that CJCP
    had a "poor track record in enrolling ELL students." It asserts that 14% of the
    students enrolled in traditional public schools in New Brunswick are ELL
    students, and that CJCP has not demonstrated that it is able to serve this student
    population. However, there was no evidence that CJCP utilized any policy or
    procedure, either before or after the lottery, to exclude ELL students. It was
    also undisputed that students gain admission to CJCP through a publically held
    A-3074-16T4
    37
    random lottery process that blindly selects students from among the applicant
    pool, and CJCP did not collect any information prior to the lottery as to a
    student's English language skills. Further, CJCP maintained that it sought to
    open a satellite campus in New Brunswick in order to reach more ELL students.
    Franklin also failed to present any evidence that CJCP was unable to serve
    the population of ELL students. It was undisputed that CJCP complied with
    NJDOE regulations during its ten years of operation, including N.J.A.C. 6A:11-
    4.8, which provides that "[a] charter school shall provide an enrolled limited
    English proficient student with all required courses and support services to meet
    the New Jersey Student Learning Standards in accordance with N.J.S.A.
    18A:7A-4 and 18A:7A-5 and N.J.A.C. 6A:15, Bilingual Education."
    Fourth, Franklin argues that the Commissioner failed to address its
    concern that the increased enrollment at the Somerset campus and the creation
    of the satellite campus will cause "catastrophic staffing issues due to unrealistic
    teacher salaries." However, there is no indication in this record that CJCP
    proposed to pay its teachers less than the amount required under the CSPA. In
    this regard, N.J.S.A. 18A:36A-14(b) provides that "[a] charter school shall not
    set a teacher salary lower than the minimum teacher salary specified pursuant to
    section 7 of P.L.1985, c.321 (C.18A:29-5.6) nor higher than the highest step in
    A-3074-16T4
    38
    the salary guide in the collective bargaining agreement which is in effect in the
    district in which the charter school is located." See also 34 N.J.R. 2920(a) (Aug.
    19, 2002) ("Charter schools pay their teachers and professional staff not less
    than the State minimum salary nor more than the salaries of the district boards
    of education in which the charter schools are located"). Therefore, Franklin's
    contention on this point also lacks merit.
    Fifth, Franklin contends that the Commissioner ignored its safety
    concerns about the Mettlers Road location. However, prior to opening the new
    campus, CJCP must submit to the NJDOE the new lease, mortgage, or title to
    the facility, a valid certificate of occupancy for educational use issued by the
    local municipal enforcing official, a sanitary inspection report with a
    satisfactory rating, and a fire inspection certificate with an "Ae" (education)
    code life hazard. N.J.A.C. 6A:11-2.1(i)(6)-(9). The regulations are designed to
    ensure that facilities are safe for students. Thus, none of the issues raised by
    Franklin in opposition to the application form a basis for denying the
    application.
    In sum, we are satisfied that the administrative record amply supports the
    Commissioner's decision to grant CJCP's request to amend its charter. CJCP
    demonstrated that it is a high-performing, Tier 1 school, a ranking it received
    A-3074-16T4
    39
    from the Department's assessment of its academic performance based on the
    metrics set forth in the State's Academic Performance Framework governing
    charter schools. N.J.A.C. 6A:11-1.2; N.J.A.C. 6A:11-2.3(b). In 2015-2016,
    CJCP students ranked in the 99th percentile statewide for Math on the PARCC
    and outperformed their home district on the 2016 PARCC in every subject. It
    was also awarded the National Blue Ribbon Award in 2016, named a High
    Performing Title I Reward School in 2015, featured as a Top Performing High
    School in U.S. News and World Report in 2015 and 2016, and designated as a
    "Top Ten Middle School" by JerseyCAN in 2013.
    Thus, a review of CJCP's performance data clearly supported the need for
    the amendment. N.J.A.C. 6A:11-2.6(b). Further, in the application and annual
    reports submitted by CJCP during its ten-year operation, it demonstrated that it
    was fiscally stable and operationally sound. Finally, the Commissioner properly
    approved CJCP's request to expand enrollment with the understanding that
    facilities would need to be identified, secured, and potentially improved to
    comply with the charter regulations. Under these circumstances, we discern no
    basis for disturbing the Commissioner's reasoned determination.
    Affirmed.
    A-3074-16T4
    40