When $350 Feels Like a Heart-Attack: Untangling East Brunswick’s Latest Tax Drama

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The Sticker-Shock Starter Pack

It all began when K.L. opened the tax portal, saw a $350 jolt on the August bill, and took to Facebook to yell into the digital void. Cue the usual chorus: construction conspiracies, partisan pot-shots, and that evergreen refrain—“Why are my taxes higher when they’re building all those apartments?”

Enter B.C.—Calm, Collected (and Wearing the Mayor Hat)

Our mayor, B.C., parachuted in with the facts:

  • Schools: +3.3 %

  • County: +3.6 %

  • Township: +0.98 %

Translation: roughly three-quarters of the increase is not set by town hall. But try explaining weighted tax levies to a comment thread already on its third GIF war.

J.K.—The Civic Sherpa We Didn’t Deserve

While emotions bubbled, J.K. quietly played traffic cop for runaway misinformation:

  • Route 18 work? State project.

  • School cuts? Separate elected board, different budget.

  • Mayor’s influence on band class? About the same as yours on the moon landing.

In a dozen replies, J.K. turned the comment pit into a crash course in Government 101, all without a single eye-roll emoji. If you left that thread smarter, thank J.K.

M.S.—Dropping the Mic (and the Receipts)

Then came M.S. with a plot twist: forget potholes and apartment complexes; the real money pit lives in the school district’s ledger. M.S. reminded everyone of the infamous freedom-of-information fiasco where the business administrator allegedly doctored meeting footage—an act that earned him a starring role in Sunshine Law slideshow presentations statewide.

M.S. didn’t just complain about rising taxes; he handed the class crib notes on why they’re rising—mismanagement, borrowed millions, and a fiscal status quo sturdy enough to survive multiple board elections.

Why Your Neighbor’s Bill Went Up Less (It’s Boring, Sorry)

Yes, South River saw an $80 nudge. No, East Brunswick isn’t secretly funding a gold-plated skate park. Different towns, different debt loads, different school budgets, different assessment cycles. Snooze? Maybe. Important? Definitely.

The Bigger Picture (a.k.a. “Follow the Money, Not the Memes”)

  1. Apartments Aren’t Magic Wands
    New ratables take years to enter the tax roll. Even then, PILOT agreements and phased assessments can mute immediate relief.

  2. Schools Drive the Bus
    With state aid shrinking and costs climbing, the district remains the tax-bill MVP—whether anyone likes it or not.

  3. Civics Class Isn’t Optional
    Confusing the mayor with the school board is how rumor millwrights stay employed. As J.K. pointed out, learn which hat funds which line item.

  4. Accountability > Outrage
    M.S.’s spotlight on fiscal oversight proves that a well-placed fact beats a thousand angry reacts. If you want taxes down, demand transparent budgeting—especially in the places eating the biggest slice.

Final Bell: Lessons from the Comment Colosseum

  • B.C. laid out the math.

  • J.K. translated it into plain English (and maybe saved a few friendships).

  • M.S. asked the question everyone else forgot: who’s watching the money once we hand it over?

If we channel even half of their combined brainpower, next year’s tax talk might involve fewer torches and more solutions. Until then, pay the bill, grab popcorn for reassessment season, and maybe bookmark the next school-board livestream—you’ll thank M.S. later.


Eyes on EB will keep tracking the numbers—and the narratives—so you don’t have to wade through 200-comment flame-wars to find the truth. Stay tuned.