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Board tables vote on terminating Talmadge Road purchase after 4-3 roll call

Edison Township Board of Education · April 24, 2026

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Summary

The Edison Township Board of Education voted 4-3 to table a resolution that would have terminated the contract to purchase a Talmadge Road property, postponing further action and leaving a $500,000 deposit at stake; residents pressed the board in public comment about the purchase and the budget's impact on taxes.

The Edison Township Board of Education voted to table a resolution that would have ended the district's contract to buy a parcel on Talmadge Road in Middlesex County, the board announced during the open session. Board member Miss Peng moved to table the item; the motion was seconded and carried on a 4-3 roll call.

The motion — described in meeting materials and in public remarks as a proposal to “terminate the contract for the purchase of the Talmadge Road property” — was tabled after Azzarello, Eryko, Ronak Patel and Peng voted yes and Lugo, White and board president Vishal Patel voted no. Because the motion was tabled, the board will not reconsider terminating that contract until a future meeting when the item is placed back on an agenda.

The vote followed comments from residents who linked the unresolved property purchase to the district's budget pressures. Members of the public asked whether cancelling the deal could meaningfully reduce the proposed levy; administration staff explained that the purchase involved about $9.9 million in capital outlay and that terminating the contract now would forfeit a roughly $500,000 deposit and return $8.5 million to the legally restricted capital reserve — funds that cannot be used to pay operating expenses or to directly lower the current-year tax levy.

During the public-comment period, speakers repeatedly urged the board to weigh fiscal impacts on taxpayers and to provide more detail on the purchase, while some called for outright cancellation. Administration officials told the board and the meeting audience that capital reserves are restricted to capital projects (roof repairs, building additions, equipment) and therefore cannot be applied to current operating shortfalls that drive a tax increase.

Board members and counsel also reminded the public that parts of the Talmadge discussions had been covered in a closed session earlier in the meeting because they involved negotiations, attorney–client privilege and other confidential matters. The board's counsel said those matters could be discussed offline in greater detail but not in open session while negotiations remain confidential.

The tabled motion means the board will leave the existing purchase contract in place until the item is formally brought back to an agenda. The timing for any renewed action was described by the board as possible at a May meeting but not on the immediate upcoming Tuesday agenda, which will focus on the budget hearing and vote.