Thursday, June 5, 2014

Pension cuts head to court

On June 25th, oral arguments will be heard by Mercer County Superior Court Judge Mary Jacobson for a lawsuit brought by the NJSP union.  Judge Jacobson said she would decide whether Christie's plan violates the 2010 pension law that Governor Christie himself passed.  This will be a major challenge to Governor Christies plan to skip a huge pension payment for both this and next fiscal years.  Governor Christie said he needs to use the money to solve a budget crisis.

The Governor is planning on taking $900 million through an executive order he signed last month, and an additional $1.5 billion for the next financial year (which begins in 3 weeks).  Christie said the state constitution requires a balanced budget every year, and this money is needed to prevent huge cuts to hospitals or schools, or major tax hikes.  However, his failure to make the pension payments violates a law he created during his first term.  It also violates a section of the NJ state constitution that states, in part, "the Legislature shall not pass any bill...impairing the obligations of contracts".

The Governor has stated that failure to make these payments is fiscally irresponsible and taking the pension money was a "regrettable move", but the state can't afford to keep paying public workers the benefits they currently get. Lets not forget that this is the same Governor that just gave many of his own staff raises as high at 23%, while at the same time he requires others to stay under the 2% cap.  How can he call one thing fiscally irresponsible, but give huge raises at the same time? 

New Jerseys Moody's credit rating has been downgraded several times since Christie has been in office.  Fee's in New Jersey have skyrocketed.  The cost to register as a corporation fifteen years ago was $50 per year.  Today it is $500 per year; a 10-fold increase.  Motor vehicle fees have quadrupled in the past fifteen years.  These are not considered "taxes", so there is not much in the way of public outcry.  Is there really a difference between a state fee and a tax?  No.  When there is a shortage of money, you would think the Governor would created a solid tax base from businesses that are seeking to come to New Jersey, but he does the exact opposite.  Since 2010, the state has doled out over 2 billion dollars in incentives to corporations and developers.  Compare that number with the $1.5 billion given out in incentives during the prior 10 years. That money could have been used to our benefit, not to the benefit of corporations and developers.

Never in the history of our state has our leadership been so poor.  Lies, deceptions, double-speak, willfully not following the law, and so on and so on...

Judge Mary Jacobson, please make the right decision, and put our pension fund money where it was meant to be.







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