West Windsor-Plainsboro board hears plea to reconsider Sherbrooke Estates rezoning; approves routine motions
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Summary
At its meeting, the West Windsor-Plainsboro Regional School District board received a parent's plea to reconsider rezoning that would interrupt student cohorts, heard a municipal update on seven new zoning ordinances and 1,800 planned residences, received a budget-calendar update and student reports, and approved routine consent items and minutes.
The West Windsor-Plainsboro Regional School District Board of Education on Monday heard a public plea to reconsider a proposed rezoning in Sherbrooke Estates, received an update from the municipal council liaison about new zoning ordinances tied to affordable housing, got a budget-calendar briefing, and approved routine consent items and minutes.
Dr. Dara Rajeshwar, a pediatrician in West Windsor and a parent of district students, urged the board to revisit the school zoning plan that would move some non-DLI students out of their cohort for two years. "I'm speaking in support of the reconsideration of the school zoning track of Sherbrooke Estates and surrounding streets, which is currently under review," she said, arguing the change "causes a significant disruption to our children's friendships and peer group at an age when stable social relationships are vitally important to their development." Rajeshwar cited research from the American Psychological Association, the American Academy of Pediatrics and a 2024 longitudinal study in the Journal of Psychological Medicine to underscore risks to social and emotional development.
In reply, Dr. Aderhold said the rezoning concern has been referred to the administration facilities committee and that Assistant Superintendent Miss Nkata (people services and planning) is reviewing the matter and will bring a recommendation to the committee. He said committee meetings are working sessions that are closed to the public, but recordings and minutes are posted after meetings.
The board also received a budget-calendar update from Dr. Aderhold, who said there was no budget presentation that night because the governor's address was postponed and state aid numbers are not anticipated until Thursday; he said a tentative budget presentation is planned for the March 24 meeting. He said state "guardrails" limiting year-to-year changes in state aid (no more than +6% increase and no more than a 3% decrease) will be honored and that the state will continue to calculate special-education extraordinary aid based on actual counts rather than percentages of enrollment.
Student representatives from High School South and High School North reported on recent school activities, including trips (a senior trip to Orlando and a Washington seminar), winter-sports results and music and theater events; the board publicly recognized a number of retirees spanning instructional and support roles.
Dan Weiss, the municipal council liaison to the board, told members the municipal council approved seven zoning ordinances to support West Windsor's fourth-round affordable-housing commitments for 2025'2035, estimating roughly 1,800 new residences concentrated around Route 1 and areas west of Route 1. "They're mostly high-density types of buildings, stacked town homes, apartment complexes," Weiss said, adding the projects are scattered among multiple pockets in town rather than a single large development.
On routine business the board reauthorized prior meeting motions from the Feb. 24 virtual meeting, approved grouped administration, finance and personnel consent items, approved the Feb. 24 minutes (motion by Loy and Ajanta) and adjourned. Several motions were handled as packaged consent items and passed by voice vote; individual roll-call tallies were not transcribed.

