Quality Public Education for All New Jersey Students

 

 
     3-30-13 Education in the News - Dept of Education-State Budget, Autism Rates in NJ
     3-20-12 Education Issues in the News
     GSCS State Budget FY 2012-2013 Testimony
     3-11-12 Education Issues in the News
     2-29-12 NJTV on NJ School Funding...and, Reporters' Roundtable back on the aire
     2-26-12 State budget, School Elections, and Federal Grant funds for local reform initiatives
     2-24-12 Headlines from around NJ - from Google (hit on nj education-nj budget)
     2-23-12 Education in the News - Education reform noted in state budget message; Facebook grant to Newark teachers
     2-23-12 State Aid Figures Released late today: GSCS Statement
     STATE AID DISTRICT LIST - PROPOSED for FY 2012-2013
     Education Funding Report on School Funding Reform Act (SFRA) issued 2-23-12
     Text of Gov. Christie's State Budget Message, given Feb. 21, 2012
     2-22-12 School Aid in State Budget Message - Is There a Devil in the Details
     2-21-12 State Budget Message for Fiscal Year 2012-2013
     FY'12 State School Aid District-by-District Listing, per Appropriations Act, released 110711
     GSCS Take on Governor's Budget Message for FY'12
     GSCS 3-7-11Testimony on State Budget as Proposed by the Governor for FY'12 before the Senate Budget Committee
     Gov's Budget Message for Fiscal Year 2011-2012 Today, 2pm
     GSCS FYI
     2-7-11Grassroots at Work in the Suburbs
     1-13-11 Supreme Court Appoints Special Master for remand Hearing
     1-20-11 GSCS Testimony before Senator Buono's Education Aid Impact hearing in Edison
     NOTE: FOR CURRENT INFO ON STATE BUDGET FY'11, GO TO LINK ON LEFT SIDEBAR '2010-2011 STATE BUDGET'
     GSCS FYI - GSCS will be testifying onTuesday in Bergen County on the State Budget
     3-17-10 Budget News - Gov. Chris Christie proposes sacrifices
     3-15-10mid-day: 'Gov. Christie plans to cut NJ school aid by $800M'
     3-14-10 'Christie will propose constitutional amendment to cap tax hikes in N.J. budget'
     3-15-10 'N.J. taxpayers owe pension fund $45.8 billion' The Record
     3-3-10 'Public Education in N.J.: Acting NJ Comm of Educ Bret Schundler says 'Opportunity'
     2-24-10 'Tight funds raise class sizes that districts long sought to cut'
     2-22-10 Christie and unions poised to do batttle over budget cuts'
     2-22-10 Trenton Active Today
     2-19-10 'Acting NJ education commissioner hoping other savings can ward off cuts'
     2-16-10 'Christie Adopts Corzine Cuts, Then Some'
     2-14-10 'FAQ's on NJ's state of fiscal emergency declaration by Gov. Christie'
     2-12-10 Assembly Budget hearing posted for this Wednesday, Feb. 17
     2-12-10 News Coverage: Governor Christie's message on actions to address current fiscal year state budget deficits
     FY2010 Budget Solutions - PRESS PACKET
     School Aid Withheld Spreadsheet
     State Aid 2010 Reserve Calculation and Appeal Procedures
     State Aid Memo (2-11-10) 2 pgs
     2-11-10 Gov Christie address to Joint Session of the Legislature on state budget and current year aid reduction remains scheduled for today
     2-10-10 'Schools are likely targets for NJ budget cuts'
     2-9-10 News article posted this morning notes potential for large loss of current year school aid
     2-8-10 'School leaders around N.J. wait and worry over state aid figures'
     1-28-10 School Surplus plan to supplant State Aid in this year gaining probability
     1-21-10'N.J.'s Christie won't rule out layoffs, furloughs to close unexpected $1.2B deficit'
     2005 Archive
     1-18-10 Advance news on 'Christie as new Governor'
     GSCS to speak at Tri-District 'Open' meeting in Monmouth on January 27
     12-15-09 GSCS is working with the Christie Transition Team
     11-29-09 Ramifications - News of NJ's fiscal realities
     Codey bill allows Budget Message to be delayed until March 16, 2010
     6-26-09 Executive Director to GSCS Trustees; Wrap Up Report - State Budget and Assembly bills this week
     6-26-09 NJ State Budget Passed late Thursday night
     6-19-09 a.m. GSCS 'Quick' FYI - State Budget Vote delayed to Thursday, June 25
     6-18-09 Deocrats say they have the votes to pass the State Budget today
     6-16-09 News from Trenton on State Budget in Senate and Assembly Budget Committees yesterday
     APPROPRIATIONS ACT FY2009-1020 as introduced
     A4100-S2010 Appropriations Act 'Scoresheet' and Language Changes released
     5-14-09 GSCS Heads Up - State Aid payments to be delayed into next Fiscal Year
     5-19-09 Treasurer David Rousseau announces additional round of cuts to Gov's proposed State Budget FY2009-2010
     4-5-09 The Record, Sunday April 5, Front Page Opinion
     Latest Title 1 'preliminary' funding under the ARRA 3-09
     Latest website filing by the USDOE on Title 1 funding
     3-13-09 Information to Districts re: Federal Stimulus- Additional Title 1 and IDEA funding information still not ready for distribution
     3-11-09 CORZINE BUDGET ADDRESS: STATE FUNDING FOR SCHOOLS A LITTLE MORE NOT LESS - FEDERAL TITLE 1 & IDEA INCREASES YET TO BE COUNTED - STATE SCHOOL AID FIGURES ON DEPT OF ED WEBSITE 1:30 TODAY - RELATED ARTICLES, MORE...
     3-10-09 GOVERNOR TO DELIVER STATE BUDGET MESSAGE TODAY - SCHOOL AID FIGURES TO BE RELEASED BY THURSDAY LATEST
     2-24-09 State Budget & Stimulus News of Note
     2-23-09 S-15 (Buono) Pension Deferral bill up for a vote in the Sentate today
     2-19-09 Federal stimulus - information re: Education funding in 'State Fiscal Stabilization' part of the package
     2-18-09 Corzine announces more cuts, more deficit
     NJ District listing, Title One & IDEA under federal stimulus law
     2-3-09 Corzine to unveil new cuts when he offers 2010 budget
     1-23-09 Schools get an eduction in thrift
     1-17-09 GSCS EMAILNET & SCHOOL FUNDING OVERVIEW
     1-16-09 Today's news notes state budget waiting on Obama stimulus package
     1-15-09 HEADS UP - Budget Message date to be delayed now to March 12
     1-14-09 Meeting with Mayors, Corzine warns of cuts
     1-9-09 State Senator requests education committee hearing on potential school funding cuts
     12-28-08 NY Times 'Pension Fight Signals What Lies Ahead'
     11-25-08 Perspective piece criticizes recent Supreme Court Abbott decision
     6-24-08 State Budget passed yesterday, as did the School Construction, Pension Reform, and Affordable Housing bills
     6-23-08 A2873-S1457 School Construction bills up for vote today, along with State Budget FY09
     6-20-08 State Budget stalls, school construction is one obstacle
     A2800 - Proposed State Budget bill released 6-17-08
     6-17-08 Legislature and Governor agree on State Budget FY09
     GOVERNOR'S PROPOSED BUDGET Fiscal Year 2009...INFO
     Office of Leg Services Analysis of Gov's Education budget FY09
     GSCS & NJ Spec. Educ.Funding Coalition on STATE FUNDING FOR EXTRAORDINARY COST FY09 issues & beyond
     6-9-08 GSCS Quick Facts: TRENTON FOCUS THIS WEEK
     3-19-08 GSCS Testimony on State Budget for Fiscal Year 2008-2009
     2-26-08 Governor Corzine's Budget Message for Fiscal Year 2008-2009
     6-29-07 Lots of news affecting NJ, its schools and communities this week - STATE BUDGET signed - LIST OF LINE ITEM VETOES - US SUPREME CT RULING impacts school desgregation - SPECIAL EDUCATION GROUPS file suit against state
     6-14-07 Revisions to State Budget filed today
     4-4-07 N Y Times, front page 'NJ Pension Fund Endangered by Diverted Billions'
     3-15-07 State eases at risk aid restrictions & 25% members of NJ Senate retiring (so far)
     3-13-07 GSCS Testimony on State Budget FY'08
     GRASSROOTS SPEAK UP re State Aid for FY07-08 & Recent Legislation that can negatively impact school communities
     Hearings Schedule for State Budget FY07-08
     3-1-07 Emerging Devil showing up in the details
     2-27-07 GSCS welcomes that state aid increases for regular operating districts helps lower & some middle income districts - will persevere to see that the state extends its share of support to education more fully to all districts
     2-23-07 News Articles re Gov's Budget Proposal
     2-22-07 GSCS EMAILNET re Gov's Budget Message
     2-22-07 Gov's Budget Message Link & Related News Articles
     2-22-07 GSCS Press Release: Governor Corzine's Budget Message today
     2-22-07 Governor Corzine's Budget Message today
     2-16 to 2-19 New Articles of Note
     2-14-07 GSCS letter to Gov Corzine & Commr of Education Davy - Request for State Aid FY0708
     NJ Assembly Session FY06 Budget Debate Majority Leader Joe Roberts standing
     7-12-06 Column on State Budget legislator items
     7-11-06 Appropriations Act bill
     7-9&10-06 State Budget news articles -wrap up & news analyses
     7-9-06 Sunday New York Times
     7-8-06 FY07 Budget approved - 19.5 in spec ed grants stays in
     7-7-06 Afternoon Friday - budget document awaiting
     7-7-06 EMAILNET - AGREEMENT ON STATE BUDGET REACHED, impt 'details' still being finalized
     7-7-06 AGREEMENT ON STAE BUDGET REACHED, impt 'details' still being finalized
     7-3-06 Roberts, Codey & Corzine still not on same page
     6-30-06 State Budget news - as the dissonance must be resolved
     6-29-06 GSCS 'QUICKNET FYI' Update on State Budget for FY 2007
     6-29-06 Mirroring the elements, State Budget looking like a 'natural disaster'
     6-25-06 State Budget issues:legislative branches conflict - news articles
     6-14-06 Assembly Minority Budget Leader Joe Malone's Op Ed
     Editorial on benefit of using UEZ surplus for spec educ aid for this year
     6-12-06 EMAILNET - Extraordinary Special Education student aid; FY07 Budget 'crunch' is on; news clips
     Weekend News Clips re Property Tax & School Funding issues
     GSCS 15th Annual Breakfast Meeting Program Info Update
     5-16-06 EMAILNET Action in Trenton
     5-10-06 EMAILNET
     5-10-06 A Lot is going on - Major News fromTrenton
     5-9-06 Supreme Ct freezes aid & Asm Budget Comm grills DOE Commissioner
     News articles
     TRENTON RALLY PROPOSED (late morning) Thurs JUNE 8
     3-28-06 GSCS testimony before Assembly Budget Comm today
     Legislative Calendar during State Budget FY07 process
     4-17-06 EMAILNET
     4-16-06 Star Ledger editorial & article re Gov v. Abbott from 4-15-06
     40-16-06 Gannett & Asbury Park Press on School Budget election issues
     4-16-06 Sunday NY Times Metro Section, front page
     Governor Corzine takes steps towards major policy initiatives.
     3-28 & 4-3-06 GSCS FY07 testimony before Senate & Assembly Budget Comm
     Grassroots at work - Ridgewood Board member testimony of FY07
     4-8-06 Corzine Administration files brief with Supreme Court re Abbott funding
     4-7-06 The Record
     3-31-06 AP 'Budget idea puts onus on income taxes, businesses'
     3-29-06 EMAILNET State Budget FY07 Hearings Update
     3-24-06 EMAILNET FYI Update on Gov Corzine's Budget FY07
     3-24-06 Schools learn who wins, loses in Corzine budget
     3-23-06 Corzine says some Abbotts can raise taxes
     3-22-06 News Article sampling on Governor's Proposed FY07 Budget
     3-22-06 EMAILNET Governor Corzine's Budget Message
     Governor's 3-21-06 Budget message & hard copy links
     3-15-06 News articles on FY07
     3-10-06 Star Ledger 'Time is ripe for poorer districts to contribute.
     EMAILNET 3-9-06 to South Jersey districts
     3-7-06 More articles on the Gov's Budget Summit and School Board members fo to Trenton
     3-7-06 Articles on Gov's Budget Summit and School Board members off to Trenton
     3-4-06 Star Ledger Interest groups to address budget
     3- 4-06 Trenton Times Likey state aid cuts frustrating districts
     3-3-06 EMAILNET Budget Discussions begin in earnest
     7-14-05 EMAILNET Record article & today's editorial re politics & inequity in school aid and S1701: Update
     Check it out - The Press of Atlantic City 7-6-05 Education Funds lie in Budget Fine Print
     3-1-06 EMAILNET State Budget FY07, Health Benefits
     2-24-06 Trenton Times - Higher schools taxes needed
     School Budget Guidelines released 2-21-07
     2-11-06 Trenton Timesn'NJ State Budget has little wiggle room'
     2-1-06 EMAILNET GSCS Advocacy FY07 Budget; On the Homepage Today
     FUNDING HISTORY - May 27 1998 - Education Week article re Abbott V - funding above parity
     2003 GSCS letter to legislators
     Star Ledger 6-29-05 Bid to Save Tax Rebates Imperils NJ Budget
     Rebate Debate on Budget for FY06
     Public Information available at New Jersey website
     S2558 Bill to provide $19.9M in Abbott aid to additional districts
     GSCS Advocacy for State Budget FY06
     GSCS Testimony: State Budget Fiscal Year 2006
2-12-10 News Coverage: Governor Christie's message on actions to address current fiscal year state budget deficits
As anticipated, and laid out in the Governor's message yesterday, school surplus funds - above the required 2% 'rainy day' account - will be used to replace the state aid payments to schools through June 30 of this year.
FACTS: As presented, 100% of the additional surplus account, plus 25% each of reserve accounts for capital, maintenance and emergency are to be used to plug the local district's budget hole created since the state school aid is going to be recycled away from schools to help fill the deficit gap in the state budget for Fiscal Year '10 (this year).
The Governor’s Budget Message for FY11is scheduled for March 16.
GSCS: It is important to note that GSCS President Jim O'Neill relayed to the Daily Record yesterday, "... "We all recognize the dire economic times and that we're not going to be able to do what we normally would like to do..." GSCS understands the fiscal stress that the state and localities are facing and we hope to be a positive part of the solution. At the same time GSCS recognizes it has a responsibility to inform the public.
A number of questions naturally arise from the plan; we will investigate and report back.
As GSCS stated in testimony this February 1 before the Senate Education Committee, “… a main tenet of the Coalition is ‘public support for public education’. A major GSCS priority is how to achieve fiscal responsibility to local and state taxpayers while assuring a stable base for quality education…We believe that the results of (any potential) reductions should be recorded and made known so that all understand the impact and learn from the experience…”
Click on more here for today's news articles on the Governor's message yesterday to the Joint Session of the Legislature.


The Record - NJ schools, colleges brace for state aid cuts

Friday, February 12, 2010

BY LESLIE BRODY AND PATRICIA ALEX

The Record

STAFF WRITERS

Education leaders in North Jersey said Governor Christie's decision to freeze state aid midyear could lead to college tuition hikes, property tax increases and school staff cuts in the fall.

Christie said Thursday he would withhold $475 million in promised state aid to schools and $62 million in aid to public colleges and universities to help balance the current state budget. But school superintendents said the plan unfairly shifted Trenton's mismanagement and budget woes onto the backs of local taxpayers.

"We anticipate some serious budget shortfalls as a result of this decision," said Paramus Superintendent James Montesano. "You're not going to make up budget deficits by cutting out Crayola crayons," he said, adding that staff reductions are a "very real possibility" before school opens next fall.

The governor said his cuts — done with a scalpel, not an axe — were painful but necessary due to the state's fiscal crisis. He said cuts were tied to the surpluses carried by each district or college, and no recipient would lose more than its surplus.

Many districts put aside a maximum of 2 percent of their budgets to pay for emergencies, such as leaky roofs, broken pipes or midyear enrollments by special-needs students who require expensive placements. Beyond those rainy-day funds, any "excess surplus" goes into easing the next year's budget.

The Christie administration said districts that are carrying excess surpluses will not get that amount of state aid this fiscal year, which ends June 30. The state will also withhold aid amounting to 25 percent of districts' reserves targeted for capital improvements, maintenance and emergencies, administration officials said.

That means most districts won't get a portion of the remaining aid payments they expected; more than 100 will lose all state aid for the rest of this fiscal year.

Bernard Josefsberg, superintendent in Leonia, said his district had created a successful program for children with special needs that generated more tuition than expected from sending districts. Due to Christie's plan, the district would not be able to use that revenue in the coming year's budget to hold down the tax burden on Leonia residents.

"No good deed goes unpunished," he said. He disputed Christie's pledge of "not one textbook left unbought, not one teacher laid off."

"Jobs will be lost here in Leonia as a result of my inability to recover through higher taxes the $400,000 hole created in next year's budget by the loss of this year's surplus," he said.

In Passaic, the surplus is used up by dealing with the vagaries of funding for special education programming, said Superintendent Robert Holster. Nearly a quarter of the city's 13,000 students get some kind of special services.

"I'm sensitive to the governor's concerns," said Holster. "I agree that we have to go on a diet, but does it have to be a crash diet?"

Adam Fried, superintendent of Harrington Park, said his district, like other efficient ones, would be penalized for creating an excess surplus by sharing garbage service with the town and even renegotiating the price of toilet paper every month. He said the aid cut — which totals nearly $130,000 — was a harsh blow on top of the budget strains the district already faced, including a 25 percent increase for health benefits this year.

"You're making school districts bleed and that's not good for children," he said.

The plan to cut $62.1 million in funding to the state's public colleges and universities is likely to trigger more hikes in a state where public tuition already is among the highest in the nation, averaging $11,000 annually at the four-year schools.

In December, Christie met with higher education leaders and slammed what he called eight years of Democratic neglect. He promised that their schools would be a priority in his administration but warned that near-term cuts could be in the offing.

"We knew this was going to be a tough budget," said Paul Shelly, spokesman for the New Jersey Association of State Colleges.

Last year, the Legislature imposed a one-time cap of 3 percent on tuition increases at the schools. Rutgers, the state university, has had several cutbacks and layoffs in the past several years. In a statement Thursday, the university called the cuts an "additional hardship."

The state's 19 community colleges will not get $8.9 million in funding they expected for the remainder of this school year. At Bergen Community College, it means a cut of about $600,000 that will make it harder to avoid tuition increases, said President Jerry Ryan. Deeper cuts and tuition hikes are likely in September, Ryan said.

Staff Writer John Reitmeyer contributed to this report. E-mail: brody@northjersey.com and alex@northjersey.com

Education leaders in North Jersey said Governor Christie's decision to freeze state aid midyear could lead to college tuition hikes, property tax increases and school staff cuts in the fall.

Christie said Thursday he would withhold $475 million in promised state aid to schools and $62 million in aid to public colleges and universities to help balance the current state budget. But school superintendents said the plan unfairly shifted Trenton's mismanagement and budget woes onto the backs of local taxpayers.

"We anticipate some serious budget shortfalls as a result of this decision," said Paramus Superintendent James Montesano. "You're not going to make up budget deficits by cutting out Crayola crayons," he said, adding that staff reductions are a "very real possibility" before school opens next fall.

The governor said his cuts — done with a scalpel, not an axe — were painful but necessary due to the state's fiscal crisis. He said cuts were tied to the surpluses carried by each district or college, and no recipient would lose more than its surplus.

Many districts put aside a maximum of 2 percent of their budgets to pay for emergencies, such as leaky roofs, broken pipes or midyear enrollments by special-needs students who require expensive placements. Beyond those rainy-day funds, any "excess surplus" goes into easing the next year's budget.

The Christie administration said districts that are carrying excess surpluses will not get that amount of state aid this fiscal year, which ends June 30. The state will also withhold aid amounting to 25 percent of districts' reserves targeted for capital improvements, maintenance and emergencies, administration officials said.

That means most districts won't get a portion of the remaining aid payments they expected; more than 100 will lose all state aid for the rest of this fiscal year.

Bernard Josefsberg, superintendent in Leonia, said his district had created a successful program for children with special needs that generated more tuition than expected from sending districts. Due to Christie's plan, the district would not be able to use that revenue in the coming year's budget to hold down the tax burden on Leonia residents.

"No good deed goes unpunished," he said. He disputed Christie's pledge of "not one textbook left unbought, not one teacher laid off."

"Jobs will be lost here in Leonia as a result of my inability to recover through higher taxes the $400,000 hole created in next year's budget by the loss of this year's surplus," he said.

In Passaic, the surplus is used up by dealing with the vagaries of funding for special education programming, said Superintendent Robert Holster. Nearly a quarter of the city's 13,000 students get some kind of special services.

"I'm sensitive to the governor's concerns," said Holster. "I agree that we have to go on a diet, but does it have to be a crash diet?"

Adam Fried, superintendent of Harrington Park, said his district, like other efficient ones, would be penalized for creating an excess surplus by sharing garbage service with the town and even renegotiating the price of toilet paper every month. He said the aid cut — which totals nearly $130,000 — was a harsh blow on top of the budget strains the district already faced, including a 25 percent increase for health benefits this year.

"You're making school districts bleed and that's not good for children," he said.

The plan to cut $62.1 million in funding to the state's public colleges and universities is likely to trigger more hikes in a state where public tuition already is among the highest in the nation, averaging $11,000 annually at the four-year schools.

In December, Christie met with higher education leaders and slammed what he called eight years of Democratic neglect. He promised that their schools would be a priority in his administration but warned that near-term cuts could be in the offing.

"We knew this was going to be a tough budget," said Paul Shelly, spokesman for the New Jersey Association of State Colleges.

Last year, the Legislature imposed a one-time cap of 3 percent on tuition increases at the schools. Rutgers, the state university, has had several cutbacks and layoffs in the past several years. In a statement Thursday, the university called the cuts an "additional hardship."

The state's 19 community colleges will not get $8.9 million in funding they expected for the remainder of this school year. At Bergen Community College, it means a cut of about $600,000 that will make it harder to avoid tuition increases, said President Jerry Ryan. Deeper cuts and tuition hikes are likely in September, Ryan said.

Staff Writer John Reitmeyer contributed to this report. E-mail: brody@northjersey.com and alex@northjersey.com

N.J. Gov. Chris Christie announces plans to tackle $2.2B budget shortfall

By Statehouse Bureau Staff  The Record/Star Ledger, February 11, 2010, 9:15PM

New Jersey Gov. Chris Christie today declared a state of fiscal emergency, and vowed to close a $2.2 budget hole.
TRENTON -- Gov. Chris Christie seized extraordinary powers to shrink the state budget today, infuriating Democratic lawmakers ahead of an even bigger fight during the next spending plan and laying the foundation for unprecedented changes in the way all New Jersey governing bodies operate.

In an executive order and speech to both houses of the Legislature, Christie said he would close a $2.2 billion budget hole, saying New Jersey is on “the edge of bankruptcy.” He revoked funds from local school districts, hospitals and NJ Transit and declared a “state of fiscal emergency,” forcing more than 500 school districts to spend their surpluses in place of state aid.

 


MORE COVERAGE:

FAQs on N.J.'s state of fiscal emergency declaration by Gov. Christie

Full Text of Gov. Chris Christie's speech on fiscal 'state of emergency'

Watch video of the speech

Tom Moran: N.J. Gov. Christie's state of fiscal emergency decree brings fury from Democrats

Paul Mulshine: Gov. Chris Christie fires the first shot in what will be a long war

Full coverage of the New Jersey budget


The governor slashed programs labeled wasteful and worthwhile, cut aid to colleges and universities and killed the Department of the Public Advocate. He urged pension and benefit cuts for all public employees, and mocked their unions by comparing their objections to his 9-year-old son’s cry of “unfair.” He called opponents of his plans defenders of “the old ways.”

“Now is the time when we all must resist the traditional, selfish call to protect your own turf at the cost of our state,” the Republican governor said. “We chose to confront the problem head on by reforming our spending habits, and laying the groundwork for reform. We have set out in a new direction, a direction dictated by the votes of the people of New Jersey, and I do not intend to turn back.”

Christie pegs next year’s budget gap — which he will address March 16 — at $11 billion, but his dramatic rhetoric and draconian fixes for this year’s $2.2 billion hole drew sharp objections from Democrats who control both houses of the Legislature. Top Democrats questioned whether it is legal for Christie to freeze already-budgeted funds, and said shifting the burden to school districts could drive up property taxes next year.

“This is an easy thing to pick someone else’s pocket — you’re taking the money from local taxpayers to fill your budget,” said Senate President Stephen Sweeney (D-Gloucester). “It’s wrong.”

Worse, he said, Christie abandoned bipartisan governing for a 30-minute televised drama where he could play the hero.

“So much for a handshake,” Sweeney said, referring to Christie’s widely praised gesture to invite Sweeney and Assembly Speaker Sheila Oliver (D-Essex) to the podium during his inaugural speech less than a month ago.

Senate Majority Leader Barbara Buono (D-Middlesex) said the broad language of Christie’s executive order could mean he has given himself power to break contracts, set aside civil service rules or anything else. “What the governor did today is in essence declare martial law,” she said. Administration officials said state law allows him to “impound” money to keep the budget balanced.

Coupled with major proposed changes to pensions and benefits, Christie’s budget plans set the stage for sacrifice at all levels of government and local school districts, shifting the burden from the state. The governor acknowledged the cuts to school aid would “not be popular” but stressed it would not take “one dime out of the classroom this year.”

Next year may be a different story, because school districts will “need to set aside new money to rebuild those reserves,” said Marie S. Bilik, the executive director of the New Jersey School Boards Association. “These are funds that they will not be able to direct to the classroom or use to control property taxes.”

Paul Shelly, spokesman for the state Association of Colleges and Universities, said the $62 million in college cuts cannot easily be made up because reserves are already dedicated toward construction or endowment maintenance.

Christie acknowledged that slicing NJ Transit subsidies by $32.7 million could lead to higher fares or reduced services, but said the authority can also run more efficiently

Betsy Ryan, President and CEO of the New Jersey Hospital Association, said Christie’s cut of $12.6 million from the charity care fund would mean a $25 million loss because the state gets a dollar-for-dollar match from the federal government.

By Claire Heininger and Lisa Fleisher

Staff writers Susan K. Livio, Peggy Ackermann, Mary Fuchs, Josh Margolin, Brian Whitley and Kristen Alloway contributed to this report.

 

Stile: Christie budget speech provokes howls -- just as desired

Friday, February 12, 2010
Last updated: Friday February 12, 2010, 8:24 AM

By CHARLES STILE
COLUMNIST
Governor Christie's "emergency" budget speech on Thursday included this one inaccurate prediction:

"The defenders of the status quo will start chattering as soon as I leave this chamber,'' he said.

They didn't chatter. They howled.

"Three weeks into his administration, all we know so far about the governor's budget priorities are that they consist of an income tax cut for millionaires and a property tax increase for everyone else,'' complained Sen. Paul Sarlo of Wood-Ridge, chairman of the Senate Budget Committee.

Christie's speech was as much a strategic political provocation as it was a strategy to close a $2 billion shortfall in the current state budget. He successfully goaded Democrats into a wartime footing. Democrats sat as his polite, glum audience during the speech and became his foil the instant he left.

The Democrats followed of a time-honored Trenton tradition of acting as the loyal, critical opposition, which suited the Christie scheme just fine. The same hand he extended to Senate President Stephen Sweeney and Assembly Speaker Shelia Oliver in a grand gesture of bipartisan cooperation at his inauguration can now point an angry finger of blame at the duo and their members. They will soon be depicted as the intransigent, parochial enemies of change.

"They'll say the problems are not that bad; listen to me, I can spare you the pain and sacrifice. We know this is simply not true. New Jersey has been steaming toward financial disaster for years due to that kind of attitude,'' Christie said.

Patrick Murray, the Monmouth University pollster who watched the speech, said it was a bold step and let Christie appear that he is controlling the debate.

"People know that there has to be an enemy in the process,'' Murray said. "If it looks like the Democrats are defending the status quo, then they are part of the problem."

Christie signaled earlier this week that the bipartisan cordiality was about to come crashing down.

He kept the Democrats in the dark over the speech details until Wednesday night, when a cursory summary was provided to Sweeney and Oliver in a five-minute conference call. Details were expected to follow the next morning in an 8 a.m. e-mail that didn't arrive until closer to 9:30 a.m., an hour before the speech.

Democrats also fumed over Christie's executive order, his 14th in four weeks, which he'll use to carry out bold budget-balancing measures, including a $475 million cut in school aid and a $12 million cut in reimbursements to hospitals for treating uninsured patients. Some Democrats began hinting that Christie has a Napoleonic streak, using executive orders to bypass the Legislature, where Democrats maintain majority control.

Oliver hinted that they might challenge the order in court, which again, would probably be just fine for Christie, giving him another forum to portray them as obstructionists. And besides, by the time a legal challenge is exhausted, the Legislature and Christie will be battling over the next budget mess.

Christie, who maintains strong approval ratings and polls that support steep cuts to government spending, has the upper hand in the court of public opinion, and the Democrats know it. Many tempered their anger with diplomacy. Sweeney reaffirmed his "willingness to work with this governor" and noted that he personally likes Christie. Assembly Budget Chairman Lou Greenwald said Christie "batted one for three today,'' and praised his pension reforms.

Republican defenders said the criticisms reflected the Democrats' disconnect with an angry, disgusted public that tossed Jon Corzine out of office. They want change, and they could care less about the legislative briefings or legal quibbles over executive orders.

"I think the governor is doing what he was elected to do — managing problems,'' said Republican Sen. Joe Kyrillos, a Christie confidant. "He is forcing what he believes are the right outcomes and in some cases the only outcomes through the institutional powers and through the force of personality, no matter how the chips fall.

Democrats will need to find a way to navigate the Christie hurricane if they are going to serve as an effective and viable opposition. They plausibly argue that the cut in school aid could spike property taxes because schools are responsible for nearly two-thirds of the property tax bill. Christie says school district surpluses can easily cover the cost of the lost aid, thus avoiding cuts in staff and programs. Maybe for this year, but many districts depended on that surplus nest egg to balance the next year's budget.

If they do craft a message and a proposal, they'll have to do it on their own, not without Christie's input. Democrats learned Thursday that with friends like Chris Christie, who needs enemies?

Governor Christie's "emergency" budget speech on Thursday included this one inaccurate prediction:

"The defenders of the status quo will start chattering as soon as I leave this chamber,'' he said.

They didn't chatter. They howled.

"Three weeks into his administration, all we know so far about the governor's budget priorities are that they consist of an income tax cut for millionaires and a property tax increase for everyone else,'' complained Sen. Paul Sarlo of Wood-Ridge, chairman of the Senate Budget Committee.

Christie's speech was as much a strategic political provocation as it was a strategy to close a $2 billion shortfall in the current state budget. He successfully goaded Democrats into a wartime footing. Democrats sat as his polite, glum audience during the speech and became his foil the instant he left.

The Democrats followed of a time-honored Trenton tradition of acting as the loyal, critical opposition, which suited the Christie scheme just fine. The same hand he extended to Senate President Stephen Sweeney and Assembly Speaker Shelia Oliver in a grand gesture of bipartisan cooperation at his inauguration can now point an angry finger of blame at the duo and their members. They will soon be depicted as the intransigent, parochial enemies of change.

"They'll say the problems are not that bad; listen to me, I can spare you the pain and sacrifice. We know this is simply not true. New Jersey has been steaming toward financial disaster for years due to that kind of attitude,'' Christie said.

Patrick Murray, the Monmouth University pollster who watched the speech, said it was a bold step and let Christie appear that he is controlling the debate.

"People know that there has to be an enemy in the process,'' Murray said. "If it looks like the Democrats are defending the status quo, then they are part of the problem."

Christie signaled earlier this week that the bipartisan cordiality was about to come crashing down.

He kept the Democrats in the dark over the speech details until Wednesday night, when a cursory summary was provided to Sweeney and Oliver in a five-minute conference call. Details were expected to follow the next morning in an 8 a.m. e-mail that didn't arrive until closer to 9:30 a.m., an hour before the speech.

Democrats also fumed over Christie's executive order, his 14th in four weeks, which he'll use to carry out bold budget-balancing measures, including a $475 million cut in school aid and a $12 million cut in reimbursements to hospitals for treating uninsured patients. Some Democrats began hinting that Christie has a Napoleonic streak, using executive orders to bypass the Legislature, where Democrats maintain majority control.

Oliver hinted that they might challenge the order in court, which again, would probably be just fine for Christie, giving him another forum to portray them as obstructionists. And besides, by the time a legal challenge is exhausted, the Legislature and Christie will be battling over the next budget mess.

Christie, who maintains strong approval ratings and polls that support steep cuts to government spending, has the upper hand in the court of public opinion, and the Democrats know it. Many tempered their anger with diplomacy. Sweeney reaffirmed his "willingness to work with this governor" and noted that he personally likes Christie. Assembly Budget Chairman Lou Greenwald said Christie "batted one for three today,'' and praised his pension reforms.

Republican defenders said the criticisms reflected the Democrats' disconnect with an angry, disgusted public that tossed Jon Corzine out of office. They want change, and they could care less about the legislative briefings or legal quibbles over executive orders.

"I think the governor is doing what he was elected to do — managing problems,'' said Republican Sen. Joe Kyrillos, a Christie confidant. "He is forcing what he believes are the right outcomes and in some cases the only outcomes through the institutional powers and through the force of personality, no matter how the chips fall.

Democrats will need to find a way to navigate the Christie hurricane if they are going to serve as an effective and viable opposition. They plausibly argue that the cut in school aid could spike property taxes because schools are responsible for nearly two-thirds of the property tax bill. Christie says school district surpluses can easily cover the cost of the lost aid, thus avoiding cuts in staff and programs. Maybe for this year, but many districts depended on that surplus nest egg to balance the next year's budget.

If they do craft a message and a proposal, they'll have to do it on their own, not without Christie's input. Democrats learned Thursday that with friends like Chris Christie, who needs enemies?

Gannett/Asbury Park Press-

Gov. Chris Christie takes ax
to New Jersey budget

Cuts to plug state's $2.2 billion deficit

By MICHAEL SYMONS • GANNETT STATE BUREAU
• February 11, 2010

TRENTON — Gov. Chris Christie laid out a series of
detailed spending cuts to lawmakers at a special
joint session Thursday, including reductions in aid
to K-12 schools, colleges, hospitals and New Jersey
Transit that kick in starting this month.

Christie cautioned that the cuts will be followed by
more difficult decisions for next year's budget,
which he'll present to lawmakers next month. The
cuts he outlined Thursday are intended to resolve a
$2.2 billion deficit in the current year's budget.

"So today, let's begin the process of fiscal reform
and discipline. Today, we are going to act swiftly to
fix problems long ignored. Today, I begin to do
what I promised the people of New Jersey I would
do. Today, we begin to give them the change they
voted for in November," Christie said.

Democrats say Christie's moves will increase costs
for state residents. His plan to withhold $475
million in aid from school districts that have money
in reserves to cover that means the money isn't
available to offset property taxes next school year,
they say. His $32.7 million cut in NJ Transit
subsidies may lead to higher fares.

Assemblyman Louis Greenwald, D-Camden, said the
Assembly Budget Committee he heads will hold a
public hearing next week on the education funding
maneuver to hear from school administrators. He
said the state should tap its $500 million surplus.

"This is reckless. What he did today is take money
from their pockets to put it in his pocket to solve his
problems at their expense," Greenwald said. "He's
unwilling to spend his surplus, but he's willing to
go to local districts to spend theirs. That's not
consistent."

Christie said the school-funding solution — an
expanded version of an idea then-Gov. Jon S.
Corzine detailed in December — "does not take one
penny from an approved school instructional

 

budget" and won't cause layoffs or property tax
increases. The cuts equal a school district's excess
surplus accounts, and all but 17 of the 581 districts
lose at least some funding.


"Now I take no joy in having to make these
decisions. And I know these judgments will affect
our fellow New Jerseyans, and they will hurt. This is
not a happy moment. But what choices do we have
left?" Christie said.

"The defenders of the status quo will start chattering
as soon as I leave this chamber. They'll say the
problems are not that bad. The governor is
overblowing it. Listen to us, we can spare you the
pain and the sacrifice," Christie said. "This has been
the siren song for too long, and we know that it is
simply not true. New Jersey has been steaming
toward financial disaster for years due to that kind
of attitude."

Freezing salaries?

Assemblyman Joseph Malone III, R-Burlington, said
Christie by executive order or lawmakers should
prohibit municipal and school property taxes from
increasing.

"We ought to be talking about pay freezes at all
levels of government. We ought to be talking about
teachers sitting down seriously and talking about
pay freezes so that we can get through this
catastrophic issue," Malone said. "This is not like
anything anyone else has ever been through."

 

An executive order Christie signed Thursday
morning — which declares a state of fiscal
emergency — directs acting Treasurer Andrew
Sidamon-Eristoff and acting Attorney General Paula
Dow to study "projected costs to the state and local
entities associated with previously negotiated
employee salary structures" and possibly present
"proposed alternatives to achieve necessary cost
savings in light of the current fiscal crisis."

Christie in his speech detailed pension and health
benefit costs for seemingly rank-and-file state
workers and asked whether those costs were fair.
Union officials at the Communications Workers of
America deemed the remarks "vilification of us as
blameworthy special interests" that reflected
"anything but statesmanship."

'Governing by edict'

Democrats who control the state Legislature were
miffed that the Christie administration didn't detail
the budget cuts to them until about an hour before t
he speech and concerned that Christie is acting
unilaterally to address the deficit by executive
order.


Senior administration officials say none of Christie's
budget-balancing moves requires legislative
approval. That includes the elimination of the
Department of the Public Advocate, effective April 1,
or transferring nearly $290 million from dedicated
funds.

"When the governor shook our hands collectively, it
was in the spirit of bipartisan effort," said Senate
President Stephen Sweeney, D-Gloucester.
"Governing by executive order is questionable to
start with. We're not sure if it's completely legal,
what he is doing. We intend for the Legislature to be
part of this discussion. The governor was elected
governor. He has a Legislature that we expect him to
work with."

"The governor is governing by edict, and it seems to
me a pretext to avoiding the Legislature's
involvement," said Senate Majority Leader Barbara
Buono, D-Middlesex. "We have co-equal branches
of government. We want to work with him. I've met
with the governor, and he's saying all the right
things, but today, really, it concerns me deeply."

Agreement in GOP

 


Sen. Robert Singer, R-Ocean, said the cuts are
necessary and need to be instituted quickly.

"This is not an option. This is a person who has
maxed out all the credit cards, tapped the house,
and now needs to go to through the grocery store,"
Singer said.

"If we don't make these decisions, government will
shut down. We can't allow that to happen," Singer
said. "The State Police won't roll. Emergency services
won't roll. The Statehouse will shut down. You can't
operate a government without money."

Among the bigger-ticket maneuvers is the lapse of
$158 million from the Board of Public Utilities' Clean
Energy Fund to the state's general fund. Jeff Tittel,
New Jersey director for the Sierra Club, said Christie
campaigned on energy as a job-producing industry
but is now undermining that.

"That's money paid for by consumers to do
conservation and renewable energy projects. This
money creates 20,000 jobs in New Jersey and is
matched by private and federal dollars. This is not
only bad for the environment, it's bad for the
economy," he said.

 

Daily Record - Governor cuts funds to all
but 2 Morris County school
districts

By LAURA BRUNO • STAFF WRITER • February
12, 2010

The majority of Morris County public school
districts will lose some state aid this school year
and be forced to draw down excess surplus or tap
 
capital
reserve accounts under a plan unveiled
Thursday by Gov. Chris Christie.

In a speech to the Legislature, Christie said he will
withhold $475 million in state aid to public schools
to help close the state's current budget gap. Several
local educators said they understand the governor's
dilemma, but they are fearful of what's coming next
month — the governor's proposal for state aid for
the next school year.

In the meantime, a total of 564 of 581 school
districts will see state aid payments withheld,
beginning Feb. 22, according to administration
officials. Of the 17 spared, only Madison and
Denville in Morris County escaped the cut.

"I don't doubt he's got big issues, big problems with
a $30 billion budget and I don't think he had much
choice but to take drastic action," said Chathams
superintendent James O'Neill.

O'Neill, whose district lost $128,589, said his
dilemma is likely to be less dire than in other
districts because the majority of the district's
 
funding
comes from local taxpayers.

Christie's plan calls for the state to withhold state
aid payments to districts carrying more than 2
percent of their budget in surplus
funds and those
with money in reserve accounts for capital or
maintenance projects, according to documents
released by the Christie administration.

Madison superintendent Richard Noonan, whose
district escaped the cut on Thursday, said he is
worried, however, that this portends badly for next
year's state aid picture. The district is already
working on a budget that projects a major state aid
cut.

"We're waiting with a certain degree of dread to see
what comes in March," Noonan said. "It would be a

 

significant challenge for us to honor our present
programs, curriculum and class size commitments if
there is a significant change . . . to the amount of
state aid we receive.

Under the plan outlined for the remainder of this
year, the state will withhold an amount equal to how
much a district exceeds the maximum 2 percent
surplus allowed under state law, according to the
administration. In addition, districts will lose an
amount equal to 25 percent of funds kept in capital
and maintenance reserve accounts. For some
districts, this means they will not receive any more
state aid payments this school year.


O'Neill said the district has about $400,000 in
capital and maintenance reserve accounts, but the
K-12 district's surplus account is below the 2
percent cap. The district was slated to receive about
$2.9 million in total state aid this year, which was
about $140,000 more than they had last school
year.

Chatham had been one of nine Morris districts that
had been promised a state aid increase by the
Corzine administration under a new funding formula
that took into account districts that were spending
less per pupil than the state deemed "adequate" and
that were experiencing enrollment increases.
Chatham fell into both categories.

O'Neill said he planned to use the $300,000 in
capital reserves to convert an old industrial arts
class at Chatham Middle School into three
classrooms. The middle school is expecting about
70 more students in the school next year because a

large sixth-grade class is moving in.

"We all recognize the dire economic times and that
we're not going to be able to do what we normally
would like to do," O'Neill said.