Posted on

Starbucks Union Baristas Vote to Authorize Strike as Contract Negotiations Continue

20221009 125433 scaled

the staff of the Ridgewood blog

Ridgewood NJ, in a significant development, Starbucks Workers United announced on Tuesday that 98% of union baristas have voted to authorize a strike. The move comes as unionized workers push for a comprehensive contract agreement with the coffee giant.

Continue reading Starbucks Union Baristas Vote to Authorize Strike as Contract Negotiations Continue

Posted on

What You Should Know About VA Disability Benefits

va og twitter image

There are currently around 1.3 million people enlisted and serving in the US army and since the US army began there have been up to 60 million soldiers that have served. That makes for a lot of veterans. If you are a veteran or know someone that is then there are some benefits that you are entitled to. 

Continue reading What You Should Know About VA Disability Benefits

Posted on

Reader says We should not be forced to pay more than what we make ourselves to our village employees

VillageHall_floods_theridgewoodblog

file photo by Boyd Loving

We should implement same rules as private organizations for salary, vacation time, benefits and pension.
Village employees now get salary that’s equivalent to private organizations, but vacation, benefits and pension is twice or more compared to what we ourselves are making at our private jobs.
We should not be forced to pay more than what we make ourselves to our village employees.

Posted on

3 Reasons Your Small Business Should Offer An Employee-Retirement Plan

r-FLORIDA-RETIREMENT-large570

April 8,2017
the staff of the Ridgewood blog

Ridgewood NJ, Small business owners probably think they have enough headaches already, what with meeting payroll, dealing with government regulations and pleasing customers.

Setting up a retirement plan for their employees is just extra red tape – and possibly expense – they can do without.

But creating such a plan is more doable than they may realize and even comes with benefits for the small business and its owner, says Andrew Denney, founder and CEO of Prosperity Financial Group (www.pfgmidwest.com).

“I’ve worked with some employee retirement plans where there was in excess of $500 million in the plan,” Denney says. “At the other end, I’ve seen businesses with as few as 10 employees set up a plan.”
Yet as a group, small businesses tend to forgo retirement plans.

For example, only 22 percent of workers at firms with fewer than 10 employees report having access to a workplace savings plan or pension, compared with 74 percent at firms with 500 or more, according to a Pew Charitable Trusts report.

Employee-sponsored 401(k) and IRA plans are among the more popular options for businesses that do offer a retirement benefit. Those savings plans allow the employees to deposit money routinely in the accounts with a deduction taken out of their paychecks.

Since these are tax-deferred retirement plans, the employees see a lower income-tax bill at the end of the year. Some employers also offer a company match, providing an even heftier balance to the accounts.

But employees aren’t the only ones who benefit. Denney says there’s also an upside for the small business owner, including:

• Employee recruiting and retention. Any business wants to hang onto good employees and offering a retirement plan helps do that. They’ll be happier knowing they’re more likely to have some financial security in retirement. A retirement benefit also serves as a recruiting tool. Imagine a job candidate who’s weighing similar offers from two businesses, but one has a retirement plan and the other doesn’t. “It separates you from the pack,” Denney says.
• A lower tax bill. The business potentially can reduce its tax burden because a company’s contributions to the retirement plan are tax deductible. In some cases, the businesses also may qualify for a tax credit to help offset the cost of starting the plan, according to the IRS.
• An opportunity to invest in your own retirement. Like their employees, small business owners may not want to work forever and need to set aside money for their own retirements. They’ll enjoy the same tax-deferred benefits the employees do as they build that nest egg.

“It’s worthwhile for a small business owner to investigate whether an employee retirement plan is more attainable than they might realize,” Denney says. “A financial professional with experience in setting up such plans can explain to them the advantages and disadvantages, and suggest which plan would work best for their situation.”
About Andrew Denney

Andrew Denney, founder and CEO of Prosperity Financial Group (www.pfgmidwest.com), has more than 13 years’ experience in the finance industry, where he advises clients in such areas as retirement planning, asset protection, estate planning and wealth management. Denney holds Series 7 and Series 66 securities registrations with LPL Financial, in addition to a life insurance license. He has a degree in finance from Missouri State University.

Securities offered through LPL Financial member FINRA and SIPC

Investment advisory services offered through Independent Financial Partners, a Registered Investment Adviser

Independent Financial Partners and LPL are separate entities

Posted on

The truth about N.J.’s pension crisis and how to fix it

14405_trenton_new_jersey_s_state_house_capitol_in_trenton
Next November, New Jerseyans will be asked to vote on a constitutional amendment to require the state government to make regular quarterly pension payments, which would put the state’s pension system — and the state of New Jersey itself — on the road to fiscal solvency within six years.
Mark J. Magyar. Star-Ledger Read more
Posted on

Christie Urges Benefit Cuts as New Jersey Retiree Rush Strains Pension

8451_10200132554652849_667462080_n

Chris Christie is promoting his tell-it-like-it-is style of governing with town-hall meetings in New Hampshire before a possible White House run. Back home, attendees of such forums haven’t heard the whole story of the pension mess throwing New Jersey’s budget into disarray.

What’s missing from the Republican’s weekly narrative, during which he blames Democrats and public unions for the employee costs crowding out other spending, is that he shares the culpability. Record retirements in response to his first-term benefit reductions contributed to the state’s $83 billion pension-funding shortfall; Another wave of departures looms as Christie seeks a second round of cutbacks. (Young/Bloomberg)

https://www.bloomberg.com/politics/articles/2015-04-14/christie-urges-benefit-cuts-as-n-j-retiree-rush-strains-pension