
JOHN REITMEYER | NOVEMBER 22, 2016
Christie gets bipartisan plan that he calls ‘more fair than the previous proposals,’ but it offers no constitutional guarantee enforcing payments
After failing to find any common ground for the past several years over the best way to address New Jersey’s grossly underfunded public-employee pension system, state lawmakers reached a rare, bipartisan agreement yesterday, voting in favor of legislation requiring quarterly instead of yearly state pension contributions.
The measure — which legislative leaders say they are confident Gov. Chris Christie will eventually sign — would help the $73 billion pension system by breaking up the annual state pension contribution into smaller installments that the sponsors hope will be easier for the state to afford than the lump sum that administrations typically try to make at the end of each fiscal year.
Depositing the payments on a quarterly basis would also protect more of the pension contribution from end-of-the-year budget cuts and allow the pension system, which is professionally managed, to generate bigger investment returns by getting more money into the system earlier in the fiscal year.
LOL. Another Democratic gag. The hard truth is we can’t afford existing pensions, if we could afford them payments would have been made to the pension funds.
To find room in the existing budget for pension payments budget cuts in many other areas of the budget are required.
This is as silly as thinking you can pay for something you can’t afford if you just cut the payments in quarters.
LOL ? I’m not laughing anymore. This is complete bullshit.,,73 billion dollars for a bunch of shovel leaning lackeys toadies and sycophants in every corner of Trenton and every corner of the 500 + individual municipalities in the state. COMPLETE BULLSHIT.