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New Jersey Must Focus on Cutting Spending All of our futures depend on it

Assemblywoman_Holly_Schepisi_theirdgewoodblog

March 30,2016
Assemblywomen Holly Schepisi

Ridgewood NJ, When looking at why the cost of living in New Jersey is so absurdly high, it is imperative to understand actual numbers for spending around the State.

Anyone following the proposed Atlantic City bankruptcy and/or takeover is probably trying to understand how Atlantic City got to this point. Most people are unaware that the population of Atlantic City consists of only 39,500 residents and 6,679 school age children. Yet, the municipal budget is $262,000,000 equaling spending of $26,531.64 per household of 4 people.

Likewise the school budget is $166,000,000 which equals an average spending of $24,887.56 per child. In other words, for a family of 4 with two school age children, the governmental and school spending in Atlantic City equals $76,306.76 per household. We must cut spending and figure out a better way. All of our futures depend on it.

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Property tax cap growing weaker across North Jersey; more towns than ever exceed 2% limit

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file photo by Boyd Loving

BY DAVE SHEINGOLD AND JOHN C. ENSSLIN
STAFF WRITERS |
THE RECORD

Reforms enacted in 2011 to keep the nation’s highest property taxes in check are showing signs of weakening as a growing number of New Jersey towns fail to stay within the 2 percent cap on increases that formed the cornerstone of the effort.

 

https://www.northjersey.com/news/property-tax-cap-growing-weaker-across-north-jersey-more-towns-than-ever-exceed-2-limit-1.1526980

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3 key issues in Christie’s budget and how they could affect you

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By Samantha Marcus and Susan K. Livio | NJ Advance Media for NJ.com
on February 17, 2016 at 8:21 AM, updated February 17, 2016 at 11:10 AM

TRENTON — Here is a look at three key issues from Gov. Chris Christie’s Tuesday budget speech that could have a big impact on New Jersey residents.

1. PENSIONS

The problem: The public pension system is underfunded by about $54 billion, and the state is responsible for about $40 billion of that.

Christie proposes to make a $1.9 billion contribution to government worker pensionsGov. Chris Christie urges the chamber to put aside partisan politics and proposes to contribute $1.86 billion to government worker pensions during the 2017 Budget Address from the Statehouse in Trenton. 02/16/2016 (Courtesy of NJTV)

Since 1996, governors from both parties have contributed less than what actuaries recommended, and the state skipped payments altogether from 2001 to 2004. And while the state was taking a pension holiday, it increased benefits for employees. In 2011, Christie struck a historic pension reform deal with Democrats, in which public workers and employers were required to pay more into the system. Christie slashed payments after two years, however, to balance the budget.

What Christie is proposing: A $1.86 billion contribution in the fiscal year beginning July 1, about $550 million more than the state is expected to contribute this year.

Chances at passing: Very good.

“This budget provides a pension payment that is the largest in our state’s history more than my administration ever before, contrary to the hyperbole from special interest groups,” Christie said.

https://www.nj.com/politics/index.ssf/2016/02/what_are_the_key_issues_in_the_upcoming_budget.html?ath=9c46bfc08d76232bb5a5e00eeaf0bfa2#cmpid=nsltr_strybutton

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2 clear choices to fix N.J.’s pension crisis

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2 clear choices to fix N.J.’s pension crisis | Opinion
By Thomas Byrne

I’m watching the state pension fund melt as the stock market drops.

The fund is well-diversified but domestic equities are still the largest single exposure. Ironically, the alternative investments which have produced good net results for beneficiaries are unpopular with many labor leaders because we are paying fees to outside experts rather than managing complex investments internally. But that is another story.

The fund balances are declining for two reasons. First, stock markets here and abroad have been bad for nearly a year. Second, our cash flow is negative as over $9 billion in annual benefits dwarf about $3 billion in contributions from the state and its municipalities.

N.J. faces financial calamity without reductions in pensions | Opinion

At the heart of the plan is to save over $2 billion in health benefit spending, using those savings to provide funding for pension benefits earned to date.

Bottom line — if I’m a public employee, I’m worried about my retirement and hopeful that politicians come up with realistic solutions before it’s too late.

Democrats led by state Senate President Steve Sweeney (D-Gloucester) have proposed a ballot referendum to constitutionally mandate large annual contributions into the pension system. Great for beneficiaries if it passes.

But the odds of passage seem slim; early polling shows that when the public realizes that it is likely to cause huge tax increases and/or major cuts to key programs, a majority would vote no.

Even assuming steady growth of over 3 percent in annual State revenues, and a millionaires’ tax raising $650 million a year beginning in 2018, and 60 percent of revenue growth being available for pension funding, and pension assets earning a steady 7.9 percent (unlikely), an additional $2.8 billion in new taxes on people other than millionaires will be needed by 2022 to pay for the current pension and health benefits.

The public will vote “No” on that amount of new taxes, particularly when it is to fund a level of benefits that they themselves could never get. With another year gone post-referendum, we’re billions more in the hole and pensions are that much less secure.

Some disagree, saying that the pensions are secure because even if the pension funds were to run dry, the state would be forced to pay retirees out of the state operating budget. It is misleading to represent that as fact. We simply don’t know.  The state’s highest court has never ruled on this issue.

Sweeney: Constitutional amendment will fix pension system, benefit N.J. taxpayers | Opinion

Every year we don’t properly fund the pension system, the future cost goes up exponentially.

I’d hate to bet my retirement security on the premise that the court would either obliterate crucial state programs or essentially mandate huge tax increases by ruling that over 25 percent of the state budget, $9 billion of $34 billion, must be for pension payments. And even if a court did so rule, the possibility exists that the state would pay out in scrip rather than in cash. That is not far-fetched; Illinois and California have used scrip to some degree in recent years.

It should never come to this. There is another way.

The central tenet is that the state can honor all pensions accrued to date by aligning benefits to those in the private sector, and recycling the cost savings to fill the unfunded liability in the pension funds.

Sweeney: Christie’s pension commission’s proposed savings is a ‘fantasy’State Senate President Steve Sweeney met with the Star-Ledger Editorial Board to discuss issues, including how to solve the state’s public workers’ pension crisis. (Video by Andre Malok | NJ Advance Media for NJ.com)

Some of the savings involving health care are structural, and would have no cost to public employees. We should at least enact those reforms.

The rub is that other proposals require public employees to accept a lower level of benefits going forward. That is exceedingly unpleasant.  But losing retirement security would be far more so. That is the choice. Denial will not solve this.

Benefit levels are far higher for New Jersey public employees than is common in the private sector. It is the Obama administration, not Republicans, that has said health benefits at the New Jersey level should be subject to a luxury tax.

So there are two paths.

Ask taxpayers to continue subsidizing a level of health benefits that even the Obama administration says is too rich.
Put those benefits at or near the highest level specified under Obamacare, and use those savings to fill the hole in the pension funds.

Certain Democrats say “just make the payments.” But when the governor asked a joint session of the legislature for a show of hands on who was willing to vote for higher taxes in order to do so, not a hand went up.

https://www.nj.com/opinion/index.ssf/2016/02/2_clear_choices_to_fix_njs_pension_crisis_opinion.html

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Mandatory pension payment equals Automatic Tax Increase

Assemblywoman Holly Schepisi

Why mandatory pension payment would be worst idea ever for N.J.

Through a ballot question in November, voters are expected to decide whether New Jersey’s constitution should require the state to make regular payments to its $80 billion public pension debt. Paul Brubaker, NJ.com Read more

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ALMOST A THIRD OF THOSE WITH SAVINGS HAVE LESS THAN $1,000 FOR RETIREMENT

wimpy

by WARNER TODD HUSTON 22 Apr 2015

Study after study shows that Americans are not saving for retirement like they should, and a new survey finds that nearly one third of people who have some sort of savings plan have amassed less than $1,000 for retirement.

The survey titled “Preparing for Retirement in America,” by Employee Benefit Research Institute (EBRI) and Greenwald and Associates, finds that only 65 percent of workers have any savings for retirement, a number that fell below the 75 percent figure from 2009.

But 28 percent of workers report that they have saved less than $1,000 for retirement, and almost 6 in 10 Americans say that their financial planning needs improvement.

Additionally, 34 percent say they have made no effort at all to saving anything or make a retirement plan. Still, most say that they intend to start saving at some point.

But intentions may not be enough. “Intending one thing and doing another is human, but it’s an impulse we should all fight hard to resist,” Rebekah Barsch, vice president of planning and sales at Northwestern Mutual, said in a press statement. “Intentions only get us so far. And when the stakes are high, it’s taking action that’s critical.”

https://www.breitbart.com/big-government/2015/04/22/almost-a-third-of-savers-have-banked-less-than-1000-for-retirement/

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Readers debate long term sustainability on the Village Budget of employee wages, pensions and healthcare

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Readers debate long term sustainability on the Village Budget of employee wages, pensions and healthcare 

Lets focus on the numbers , the problem and the solutions , not attacking unions or employees

When less than a 100 current employees and retirees consume over 50% of the Village’s annual budget in wages, pensions and healthcare, you have to question whether that’s an appropriate trade-off in a Village with only 25,000 people ? The BoE is similar, why should under 1,000 teachers and administrators (less than 4% of our Village population) consume 65% of our annual property taxes? It’s only going to get worse.

I was able to find a copy of the Village Budget Newsletter for the 2014 budget at the following link.

https://mods.ridgewoodnj.net/pdf/manager/2014BudgetNews.pdf

According to this document, which is provided by our Village Manager, the Village has a combined total annual budget of $46.2 million. Out of the $46.2 Million, the Police Department budget expenses are $9.6 Million (20.78%) and the Fire Department is $8.2 Million (17.5%). Combined, Public Safety amounts to $17.8 Million dollars or 38.529% of the annual budget. I can’t help but wonder why you chose to exclude the Debt Service of $4.8 Million from your calculations. By doing so you create the illusion that the overall costs for Public Safety are higher than they actually are in reality.

If you’d read the Budget Newsletter you would have noticed that, excluding the $4.8mn in debt service which we have to pay as a Village in 2014, police, fire and emergency service wages & benefits consumes $19mn of what’s left of the Village budget, or half of the budget… spent on less than 100 active employees plus retirees. The Village municipal employees and retirees number far more than just public safety employees and retirees, and yet Public safety contractual salary increases represent more than half of total salary increases of $900K+ in 2014, and that doesn’t include unfunded liabilities (future retirement payouts to police & fire) of $7.1M (against a reserve of $479K). We had to lay off 10% of the Village workforce in 2010 just to keep feeding this beast, and that has led to a reduction in Village services for all Villagers. That’s a poor trend for Villagers

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Calif. Employee Pensions Are Not Sacred Cows, Judge Rules. But Don’t Call the Slaughterhouse Just Yet.

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Calif. Employee Pensions Are Not Sacred Cows, Judge Rules. But Don’t Call the Slaughterhouse Just Yet.

Scott Shackford|Oct. 2, 2014 10:50 am

Public sector unions in California have used their enormous clout to protect their plum pensions, making it nearly impossible for municipal governments to scale back benefits in any way shape or form (even for employees they hadn’t even hired yet). Even as California cities file for bankruptcy, unable to pay off various creditors, the California Public Employees’ Retirement System (CalPERS) has argued that debts owed to them are special and off the table. They cannot be reduced or severed, even in the case of bankruptcy.

And then yesterday U.S. Bankruptcy Judge Christopher Klein’s told CalPERS it was wrong. In the case of a bankrupt city, pensions can be cut just like any other debt. That’s what the bankruptcy process is for. As The Sacramento Bee explains, the ruling came because a creditor in the bankruptcy of the city of Stockton, Franklin Templeton Investments, is upset that it’s only going to get a ninth of what it’s due and wants a better deal, and that might come from money going to pensions.

https://reason.com/blog/2014/10/02/calif-employee-pensions-are-not-sacred-c

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Reader says Don’t blame the State Workers on Pensions

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Reader says Don’t blame the State Workers on Pensions 

NJ Gov. Chris Christie’s pension moves cost taxpayers and retirees billions
Aug 25th 2014 3:05PM

By RYAN GORMAN

Embattled New Jersey Governor Chris Christie faces another possible scandal – this time for possibly costing tax payers nearly $4 billion after diverting state pension funds to Wall Street firms.

Wall Street mega firms Blackstone, Third Point, Omega Advisors, Elliot Associates and The Carlyle Group have reportedly pocketed $3.8 billion dollars in fees since 2010 at a rate triple what was paid to pension fund managers prior to Christie assuming office.

Christie advisor Robert Grady notably had a long career at The Carlyle Group prior to joining the government, according to the International Business Times.

The switch was made in 2010 to give the state “diversified portfolio and maximize returns while appropriately managing risk,” Grady told the trade publication Institutional Investor in a report headlined “New Jersey ups the ante.”

The Carlyle Group has received $450 million in state pension funds while ranking among the top fee earners on Wall Street, according to state disclosure documents.

All management fees paid to firms by the pension have skyrocketed from only $125.1 million in 2009 to nearly $400 million in 2013, according to the New Jersey State Investment Council, which oversees the pension.

Those higher fees coupled with underperforming assets have left the pension with a benefits gap bigger than the state’s entire education budget.

This while the pension eked out a return of only 11.8 percent last year while similar funds average nearly a full percent higher, according to the IB Times.

Both pension funds used by teachers in California saw returns well over 18 percent in June alone, the Associated Press reported. They had expected returns of only 7.5 percent for the whole year.

New Jersey’s fund is also invested at a rate of just over 25 percent in financial firms, according to the NJSIC, more than double any other sector.

At least one person voted against Christie’s diversion plan, and he told the IB Times this outcome was inevitable.

“All the leading players on the [New Jersey State Investment Council] were from the alternative universe and all of their decisions were driven by a political agenda and an investment ideology which had no relationship to facts on the ground,” said Jim Marketti.

“And the facts were that you simply couldn’t justify these investments on the basis of what they cost in fees to generate a dollar of new returns.”

A New Jersey official defended the moves, saying that the state’s pension has earned a return this year of 15.9 percent.

Similar funds are averaging returns of well over 17 percent, according to the IB Times.

This is just the latest in a series of bizarre scandals for Christie that have included the “Bridgegate” traffic tie-up at the George Washington Bridge, the possible bullying of at least one high-profile mayor (Hoboken’s Dawn Zimmer) over Superstorm Sandy recovery funds and scrutiny of real estate deals around the state.

The questionable quandries have put a dent in his reported presidential ambitions as Christie defends the pension problems by saying they are proof retirement benefits to retirees – earned through decades of service to the Garden State – need to be cut.

There’s no word on whether “The Governor” would also demand fees paid to Wall Street also be cut.

https://www.aol.com/article/2014/08/25/nj-gov-chris-christies-pension-moves-cost-taxpayers-and-retire/20952169/

 

The problem with this article is it fails to mention all the graft of prior administrations , looking to blame only Christie while both Corzine and Mac Creepy ( and most of them since Whitman)  have far worse records managing the state pension funds ,Mac Creepy even hired non wall street totally unqualified advisors to manage money . 

Remember large returns come at a price and you get what you pay for . If they are over charging  well that typical politicians ,but the real issue is simple math , while you cant blame most of the workers for taking the checks , you can blame politicians looking for those union contributions to their political campaigns ,while the taxpayer has no representation  at the bargaining table ,its a very significant conflict of interest. 
The crux of the issues is with all pension systems is that it takes 10 or more  workers paying in to take care of every retiree, but productivity and technology continue to shrink the work force  .Less workers equal less money being paid in . To make up we increase salaries and hire more people than we should .
Thus a lot of unproductive dead wood . The private sector found this out a long time ago with US Steal, Bethlehem Steal and the auto industry .

After a certain point you read the law of diminishing returns  and for the tax base it becomes totally unsustainable ,.

For example in 1900 it took 5000 people to make 1 ton of steal , in 1980 it took 50 , so now the 50 were paying the pensions for 4950 people…ouch .

States like New Jersey are well past the breaking point  ,with companies and taxpayers high tailing it out of here , leaving fewer and fewer people to pick up the tab .

Depending on huge returns on wall street for prolonged periods of time is foolish and very dangerous  as the article points out fees need to be cut , money borrowed needs to be returned with interest,and retirees living out of state need to be taxed on their pension at a higher rate  as well as current state employees need to pay a far
larger share for their benefits.
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Pensions center stage today for Christie in court

Gov. Chris Christie Discusses Candidates For Sen. Lautenberg's Seat

Pensions center stage today for Christie in court

Wednesday, June 25th, 2014, and though Gov. Chris Christie is talking pension reform, the most vital pension conversation, at least in the short term, is being held in a Trenton courtroom this afternoon. (Symons/The Asbury Park Press)

https://www.app.com/story/news/politics/capitolquickies/2014/06/25/pensions-center-stage-today-for-christie-and-in-court/11345877/

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Detroit not alone, expect more bankrupt cities: Expert

detroit-fight-shows-why-public-pensions-are-bound-for-problems

Detroit not alone, expect more bankrupt cities: Expert

Michelle Fox | @MFoxCNBC
11 Hours AgoCNBC.com

Expect more U.S. cities to face bankruptcy like Detroit, former New York Lieutenant Gov. Richard Ravitch told CNBC’s “Street Signs” Thursday.

“There are many more [cities] that are facing enormous fiscal squeezes… who are cutting education, cutting infrastructure investments and borrowing as long as the bond market permits,” he said.

Ravitch, who is advising Detroit’s bankruptcy judge, wrote about his prediction in an op-ed in the Wall Street Journal last week.

“We can expect to see more Detroits,” he wrote.

https://www.cnbc.com/id/101698390

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Reader says Just reading some of the comments from municipal pensioners and union hacks on this blog, and it’s no wonder we’re in such a mess in this state

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file photo Boyd Loving

Reader says Just reading some of the comments from municipal pensioners and union hacks on this blog, and it’s no wonder we’re in such a mess in this state

Just reading some of the comments from municipal pensioners and union hacks on this blog, and it’s no wonder we’re in such a mess in this state. They are living in fantasy land, expecting new municipal hires to be able to afford their own house and property taxes in Ridgewood, and thinking that their oversized pensions and gold plated healthcare-for-life are sustainable if we just keep raising property taxes every year… I’m not even sure these benefits were negotiated in good faith anymore judging by the comments – when you have a potential conflict of interest with former Police and Fire management on the Village Council approving outrageous wage and benefit increases, i.e. in the 2009 CBAs and again when they were re-opened in 2010, you leave the Village taxpayers with an even bigger entitlement liability. Were those CBAs really negotiated in the best interests of taxpayers when you hand out +4% annual wage increases during a recession ? All the union guys talk about is the current cost for public safety – they always ignore the future fixed costs for pensions & healthcare which will cost us hundreds of millions of dollars in the next 15 years – money that we won’t be able to use for services and improved quality of life for Villagers. Many of these retirees don’t even live in Ridgewood !