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>Kathleen A. Donovan : There have been confusing news reports inaccurately linking my pension status

>Kathleen A. Donovan : There have been confusing news reports inaccurately linking my pension status

There have been confusing news reports inaccurately linking my pension status with retirement issues involving other public employees and elected officials. Unfortunately, New Jersey’s complicated public employee retirement/pension system contributes significantly to the confusion which leads to inaccurate stories which raise unnecessary concerns.

So that you know the real, accurate story, I have taken the liberty of providing answers to questions you may be asking. If you have any additional question not addressed below, please let me know and I will respond directly.

Regards,

Kathleen A. Donovan

———————————————————————————

Q. Are you retired?

A. No. I retired as County Clerk last year when I was elected County Executive. This was required as I could not and would not hold two elected positions at the same time.

Q. Why did you take your pension?

A. I had to under State law. When I retired as County Clerk I could no longer be included in the Public Employment Retirement System (PERS). I was in effect “kicked out.” My options were limited. I could take my pension or leave my money in limbo and collect it at a future date. What would you do? Probably exactly what I did: take it.

Q. Would your pension have been at risk if you had left it with the state?

A. Quite possibly. It’s farfetched but the state’s pension plan is underfunded by some $55 billion. Would you risk your money if you didn’t have to?

Q. Could you have taken your pension earlier?

A. Yes. Under New Jersey State law I could have retired after 25 years of service (in 2007). I chose not to. I only took my pension when I had no other viable option.

Q. Are you getting a new pension as County Executive?

A. No. Neither the taxpayers nor I contribute to my pension any longer. It’s one and done and I’m done. No new pension.

Q. Is this compensation?

A. No. My compensation as County Executive is $134,000 (actually less than I earned as County Clerk). I do not receive additional pension benefits because I have taken my pension as provided by law.

Q. Are you taking advantage of a loophole?

A. No. This is not a loophole. This is totally consistent with State law.

Q. Are you “double dipping”?

A. No. I get my paycheck but no additional pension benefit.

A pension is not compensation. Its money put away for retirement. I do pay taxes on my pension as it is now personal income to me. But I get it whether I work or not. It’s not pay. It’s pension.

Thanks for your interest. Again, if you have any other questions please e-mail me at:

countyexecutive@co.bergen.nj.us

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>Kathleen Donovan Won’t Play in Desperate Democrats’ Show Trial

>Kathleen Donovan Won’t Play in Desperate Democrats’ Show Trial

September 8, 2010

James Carroll, Chairman
Bergen County Board of Chosen Freeholders
One Bergen County Plaza
Hackensack, NJ 07601

Dear Chairman Carroll,

I have been made aware of your “invitation” to appear at today’s Freeholder work session. Please be advised that I do not accept your invitation nor will I be appearing at what amounts to a “show” for the remainder of this campaign.

Your invitation is unique and without merit. I have been County Clerk for 21+ years and, until I filed to run for Bergen County Executive this year, I was never “invited” to Freeholder meetings. Your purpose is clearly political and reflects the lowest form of political abuse. It’s a pattern that has been followed since I announced my candidacy for County Executive. It is a prime example of why voters are turned off by corrupt government officials. Yes, this is an example of corruption in the truest sense.

Did you “invite” County Executive McNerney to “visit” after numerous instances of corruption and questionable practices at a number of County agencies under his control including the Bergen Academies and Bergen County Improvement Authority?

Have you made any effort whatsoever to address hundreds if not tens of millions of cost overruns identified by the Record in the construction of Overpeck Park?

The answer to these and other egregious politically inspired activities is a resounding “no”.

I understand that you have also invited Acting County Police Chief Malakas to presumably conduct or should I say once again attempt to re-ignite the witch hunt which was in fact the County’s failure to conclude audits of the County Clerk’s office for a number of years. You and the McNerney administration have attempted to paint your failures as mine. Your clumsy effort was a feeble attempt to denigrate the hardworking employees of the Clerk’s office which has earned its reputation for efficiency and customer friendliness.

Here are the facts that would never be presented during your political set-up. First, the County Clerk’s office is so well managed that we have been able to save each Bergen County family roughly $300.00 — the amount of revenue over expense that your office has taken in under my leadership. Much of those savings is turned over to you for County uses. Has that money been identified through audit?

During the past two years I have reduced my workforce and lowered by budget. Can the same be said for the County and its questionable patronage hiring practices?

To set the record straight, a police escort comes every day to our office to accompany our staff person making the daily deposits. Without an escort the deposit does not go. I do not allow my staff to go to the bank unless they go with the police. This has been the policy in place for at least twenty years, which I implemented. The Sheriff’s Officers escorted my staff when we were in the Court House, as they were in charge of security there, and the BCPD has provided escorts for my office ever since we moved into the new administration building some ten years ago.

Acting Chief Malakas received a letter from my office last Friday, requesting a meeting with him to work out a schedule. I was not in the office when he called on Tuesday. I expect we will be meeting shortly.

So there it is. There will not be a “Show Trial” in the tradition of Mao’s China or Stalin’s Soviet Union. Instead of trying to sully my record and the record of the Clerk’s office, you will have to run on your own – as will County Executive McNerney.

You will have to explain your stewardship of our of control agencies like the BCIA where the debt alone has escalated from $10 million to $450 million under your control. That’s more that $500 for every man, woman and child in Bergen County! You will have to explain why county debt and spending have grown out of control under your watch with last year’s spending increased by $85 million or $100 for every county resident.

You will have to explain why, while attempting to smear me, you blatantly appropriated some $70,000 so that the County Executive could attempt to paint over the scandal of Overpeck Park using taxpayer money to pay for what amounts to pure, inaccurate political campaign TV commercials.

You will have to explain a lot to the voters between now and November 2nd. And I can promise you that the questions that you fail to answer now will be asked again in a more formal manner next January.

Very truly yours

Kathleen A. Donovan

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>Bergen County Executive Race: Kathleen Donovan scores major union endorsement ?

>New Jersey Laborers Union Endorses Republican Kathleen Donovan for Bergen County Executive

One of the state’s most powerful unions, the New Jersey Laborers Union, endorsed Bergen County Clerk Kathleen Donovan for Bergen County Executive today, citing her management experience, her ability to reach across party lines and build consensus, and her vision for responsible economic development in Bergen County as well as her commitment to improving infrastructure and creating jobs for local residents.

With more than 20,000 members statewide, including 900 members of Building Laborers Local 592 of Fort Lee, and 8,000 members of General and Heavy Construction Laborers Local 472, which represents Northern New Jersey–the New Jersey Laborers Union is committing its full resources to the Donovan campaign.

It is anticipated that hundreds of laborers will volunteer time to the campaign through phone banking, voter registration drives, get out the vote drives, and member-to-member education.

Laborers Vice-President and Eastern Regional Manager Raymond M. Pocino called the early endorsement a sign of the union’s confidence in Ms. Donovan. “Through the years, no matter which political party was on the rise or what party was down, Bergen residents time and again re-elected Kathe Donovan for public office. There is a reason for that. It is because of her consistency of effort, her commitment to put people first and her ability to solve problems and create opportunities,” said Pocino. “We support her candidacy for county executive, and more importantly, we support her vision for Bergen County.”

Pocino praised Kathe Donovan’s leadership and experience with economic development as a key factor for endorsement. “Kathleen Donovan was the first woman to chair the Port Authority of New York and New Jersey, and she understands that prosperity won’t happen without smart public investment and job growth,” said Pocino. “Kathe Donovan not only has a vision for Bergen County’s future but she also has a track record that residents can trust.”

The New Jersey Laborers Union is affiliated with the Laborers’ International Union of North America (LIUNA), and represents more than 20,000 members statewide in various industries, including construction, clean energy, environmental remediation, sanitation and recycling, security, and education. The New Jersey Laborers are widely viewed as having been instrumental in helping to lift living standards and workplace safety for employees in construction, clean energy, and hazardous materials removal, and for developing innovative cooperative relationships with employers.

######

Contact: Rob Lewandowski: 609-731-5396

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>Kathleen A. Donovan: I strongly oppose repeal of Bergen County’s Blue Laws

>Honorable Chris Christie
Governor, State of New Jersey
State House
125 West State Street
P.O. Box 001
Trenton, NJ 08625

Dear Governor Christie:

As you know, I strongly oppose repeal of Bergen County’s Blue Laws. Last week you challenged Bergen legislators to find an alternative to the $65 million in sales tax revenue the New Jersey Retail Merchants Association projects would be collected if Blue Laws are repealed in Bergen County. As of yet no one has responded with new and or innovative ideas. Let me attempt to fill that void and offer a number of suggestions.

First, please note my letter of November 13, 2008 (see attached) to then Governor Corzine with copies to north Jersey legislators (including those representing Bergen County) in which I first I suggested and now again propose that the state collect the seven percent sales tax from the New York Giants and New York Jets that should be owed on the initial sale of Personal Seat Licenses by the teams. The Jets and Giants projected revenue of no less than $800 million from these sales. That will generate one-time revenue of approximately $56 million. New Jersey taxpayers and not billionaire team owners from New York should be the beneficiaries of this windfall.

You have suggested that all contracts involving the state and its agencies should be reexamined in order to find additional benefits to both close the budget gap and thereby assist New Jersey’s overburdened taxpayers. You have asked all taxpayers, homeowners, teachers, public employees, boards of education, municipalities and others to sacrifice. Shouldn’t the Jets and Giants be included?

I feel strongly that all Sports Authority related contracts (including the lucrative contracts with the Jets and Giants) be re-examined for review and possible changes to insure that the maximum benefit possible is accruing to taxpayers.

Second, I recommend that you authorize and immediately establish an Office of Asset and Revenue Recovery in the Attorney General’s Office. The sole purpose of this office will be to use the civil process to recover the hundreds of millions of dollars already identified as having been wasted, misapplied or fraudulently spent by public agencies including the School Construction Corp., UMDNJ, etc. In addition, this office should immediately pursue action against entities such as “EnCap” whose activities have already been reviewed by the Inspector General.

Third, I would urge you to establish a Statewide Taxpayer Hotline both via telephone and on-line so that waste, fraud, abuse and mismanagement can be identified and appropriate action initiated. My first act as County Executive will be to establish such a Hotline in Bergen County.

I look forward to working cooperatively with you and your administration to resolve issues through creative and innovative problem solving. Unfortunately, we have seen in the past week or so that too many elected officials prefer political pandering and stooping to the lowest common denominator rather than working on behalf of their constituents. Elected officials have many tasks. Grandstanding and political expediency are not among them.

Very truly yours,

Kathleen A. Donovan
Bergen County Clerk

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>New Jersey Governors Race: People Continue to Flee the State

>
“Consider the high taxes and the rest of it, this really shouldn’t be a surprise. But, nearly 59 percent of Mayflower’s moves over the first nine months of 2009 in New Jersey were to relocate residents out of the state. The only three states that surpassed New Jersey were Michigan (66 percent), Maine (59.2 percent) and Nebraska (62.5 percent). “For the last four years, we have been ranked among the highest in the percentage of outbound moves,” said Assemblywoman Nancy Munoz. “There are reasons for that, starting with taxes and jobs. Unfortunately, we have too many of the former and not enough of the latter. And with the governor saying he will not rule out further tax increases, the trend for more people leaving the state will continue.”

https://blogs.app.com/politicspatrol/

any comment from the Candidates?

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>Why business is fleeing the state

>Thursday, May 08, 2008
It’s like watching a car wreck in slow motion.

What the Democrats are doing to the state’s economy, I mean. Pieces are flying off in all directions. In terms of taxes and regulation, New Jersey was once a relative haven, a cheap place to do business. But for most of this century, we’ve been slowly losing high-income residents and high-income jobs. James Hughes and Joe Seneca of the Bloustein School of Planning and Public Policy at Rutgers have been documenting this in a series of depressing reports about the state’s economy.

“When business decisions for expansion are made, they’re just not being made in New Jersey,” said Seneca when I spoke to him yesterday.

The primary source of job growth in recent years has been in government, not private industry. And that represents a death spiral. Public employment creates higher taxes, which in turn discourage private employers from locating or expanding in New Jersey.

Don’t worry, though. The Corzine administration’s doing something about the business climate: It’s making it worse. That Family Leave Act the governor signed recently will raise payroll taxes and will also force employers to grant leave to workers for up to six weeks at a time.

And then the other day the Department of Community Affairs adopted new affordable-housing guidelines that put a burden on businesses not seen in any other state. If you want to construct a store or office complex in New Jersey, you can be required to construct or finance housing nearby. Democrats are even pushing for a statewide 2.5 percent tax on all commercial construction to fund that home building scheme.

This anti-business environment began with the first major action Jim McGreevey took in 2002. He raised the corporate income tax. The small increase in revenue doesn’t make up for the jobs that will go to lower-tax states.

“All we’re looking for here is a billion more,” said Assemblyman Joe Cryan at that time. Cryan has since risen to state Democratic chairman thanks to the attitude embodied in that quote.

To get that billion, McGreevey had to tax corporations through an “alternative minimum assessment” even in years when they had no profits.

By 2004, a CFO Magazine survey of corporate tax officials showed New Jersey to have “the least fair and predictable” tax system in America. But McGreevey was just getting started. He proposed a so-called “millionaire’s tax.” The Democrats got it through the Legislature with the false claim that it would cost the typical taxpayer in the over-$500,000 bracket a mere $846 annually. The actual average cost was $29,000 a year.

Rich people can do math even if Democrats can’t, and that tax chased some high-income retirees to Florida and wealthy Wall Streeters to Connecticut.

Just in case any of those rich guys had any thought of moving to the beautiful northwestern section of New Jersey, McGreevey also pushed through the Highlands Act. Theoretically, the bill was supposed to protect the unspoiled wilderness. But shortly after it was adopted, I visited a guy who owns a strip of land fronting on the highway in a commercial district of Mount Olive. He wanted to build an office park there but was prohibited by the new law. Other states dream of attracting such businesses because of their clean, high-paying jobs and their role in reducing property taxes for homeowners. Not Jersey.

When Wall Street whiz Jon Corzine took office in 2006, he had a chance to change the anti-business climate created by his predecessor. And he had a promising start, by which I mean he kept promising to do so.

As for keeping those promises, no dice. His pledge to “call a special legislative session to deal with property taxes” led to a systematic process of rejecting any ideas that would cut the cost of government. A low point in that effort came when Corzine appeared at a rally of public employees outside the Statehouse and pledged to protect the workers against seniority and pension reforms that might be part of any property tax reform proposal.

To his credit, Corzine did eliminate McGreevey’s alternative minimum tax. Other than that, his administration has been as anti-business as McGreevey’s, though he at least has toned down the rhetoric.

As for his latest moves in the area of family leave and affordable housing, that stuff might sound nice, but it makes New Jersey even less competitive, says Hughes.

“Pennsylvania will make the argument that New Jersey is not business-friendly,” Hughes told me. “It’s a business climate effect other states will use against us.”

And it’s a business climate that never would have developed if not for a deliberate policy of the past two Democratic administrations.

As I said, this has been like watching a car wreck. But there’s one difference: This is no accident.

Paul Mulshine may be reached at pmulshine@starledger.com. To comment on his column, go to NJVoices.com.