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Summer fun the State of NJ is spending $27.3M per mile rebuilding Jersey Shore’s Route 35 Golden Highway

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May 22,2016

the staff of the Ridgewood blog

Ridgewood NJ, next time you make a trip to the Jersey shore take a ride on New Jerseys latest tourist attraction, the reconstruction of Sandy-battered Route 35 or the “Golden Highway”.

According to an Asbury Park Press investigation New Jersey taxpayers are being charged tens of millions of dollars in cost overruns.The press found that the project, announced by Gov. Chris Christie in 2013, is already $76 million over budget and a year behind schedule.

Asbury Park Press puts the potential final cost of $341 million , that means that the 12.5-mile road construction in Ocean County will cost a jaw-dropping $27.3 million per mile making it one of the most expensive road projects in the state.

The press also found that the state paid about $24.5 million to have three contractors essentially stop working during design and summer delays.

When the project was announced in 2013, the Governor stressed that “this is not just a resurfacing job.”
and the ,“This new road will be better and more durable in every way,” .

This should give you pause to think when Trenton politicians cry over the depleted state Transportation Trust Fund ,and look to raise gas taxes to fill their pockets .
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Study: N.J. spends $183,757 to build, maintain a single mile of road

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New Jersey spends $183,757 to build and maintain a single mile of road, according to a new study by Rutgers University and the New Jersey Department of Transportation. Christopher Maag, The Record Read more

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Plot Thickens for Transportation Trust Fund as Turner Proposes Tax Break for the Poor

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Senate Democrats announced a bill to raise New Jersey’s Earned Income Tax Credit by ten percent Tuesday, predicting that the move would cost the state $120 million but generate $180 million worth of increased economic activity. The bill from Senator Shirley Turner (D-15) bill is the latest development in the legislature’s amorphous definition of “tax fairness,” the phrase that Governor Chris Christie lit on when asked about the compromises he is willing to make to raise the state’s gas tax in an attempt to fund the ailing Transportation Trust Fund. JT Aregood, PolitickerNJ Read more

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Christie administration: Road fund could go broke this summer

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New Jersey’s transportation funding system is in disarray, and neither the governor nor state legislators has a plan for how to plug a financing gap that tops $2 billion, administration officials and Assembly members said Wednesday at the first budget hearing of the season. Christopher Maag, The Record Read more

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Poll: NJ residents oppose state gas tax hike

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March 17, 2016

The Staff of the Ridgewood blog

New Rutgers-Eagleton poll found that 56 percent of New Jerseyians oppose a gas tax hike.

Ridgewood NJ, Chanel 12 news reports that a new poll conducted by Rutgers-Eagleton Poll found that more than half of New Jersey residents are opposed to a gas tax increase. However, many of New Jersey’s lawmakers say that raising the gas tax is likely to happen.

New Jersey’s transportation fund is set to run out of money in June and the state’s legislators have not yet introduced a way to replenish the fund. Many have mentioned a gas tax hike as a way to increase revenue.

According to lawmakers ,the transportation fund pays more than a billion dollars each year for maintenance and repairs. Lawmakers have until June 30 to renew the fund.

Many political experts say that introducing the hike would be a politically unpopular proposal.

Critics of the increase in the gas tax point to the high cost of New Jersey road construction , the fact the New Jersey already allocates one of the high amounts of funding in the nation to roads and bridges thru tolls and gas tax . To many it appears that Trenton has used the (TTF) as a political slush fund to finance other state business ie … the TTF has financed everything but roads.
Many suggest an audit for the Transportation trust fund (TTF ) , and any money in the fund be specifically related to transportation projects only.
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Pothole patrols begin repairs across New Jersey

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BY CHRISTOPHER MAAG
STAFF WRITER |
THE RECORD

As winter draws to a close this coming weekend, work crews are fanning out across the state this week to begin repairing roads damaged by winter weather. This year’s goal for the annual road repair campaign is to fill a quarter million potholes, about 70,000 more than usual, said acting state transportation commissioner Richard Hammer.

 

https://www.northjersey.com/news/pothole-patrols-begin-repairs-across-new-jersey-1.1529667

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Report: N.J. had record $153.5 billion in outstanding debt last July

New Jersey Democrats Move to Raise Taxes

BY SALVADOR RIZZO
STATE HOUSE BUREAU |
THE RECORD

New Jersey faced $153.5 billion in outstanding debt obligations last July, hitting a new record, according to a report released by state officials Friday.

The cost of public employee benefits, school construction and transportation projects drove the 6.9 percent, or $9.9 billion, increase for fiscal 2015.

But not all of the increase was attributed to new debt.

Treasury Department officials said New Jersey transitioned to a new accounting methodology for pension and post-retirement health benefits last year. Those bookkeeping methods, which are more stringent than what the state used previously, were designed by the Governmental Accounting Standards Board.

Growth in unfunded pension liabilities, unfunded medical benefits for retirees, and the effect of switching to the new accounting standards contributed an $8.5 billion increase in the state’s non-bonded debt.

On the other hand, New Jersey’s bonded debt rose $1.4 billion, or 3.35 percent, according to the report, led by a $755 million surge in borrowing for school construction projects and $609 million in added borrowing for the state’s troubled Transportation Trust Fund.

That fund’s borrowing authority runs out at the end of June, and Governor Christie and lawmakers have not said how it will be renewed – through more borrowing, an increase in New Jersey’s gas tax, or another method.

https://www.northjersey.com/news/report-n-j-had-record-153-5-billion-in-outstanding-debt-last-july-1.1518816

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Reader says the Transportation Trust Fund is nothing more than a piggy bank to fund pet projects and to funnel payments to favored firms

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file photo by Boyd Loving

The TTF is not going bust. Its 5 year authorization ends in June, so either it is reauthorized from July 1st or we find a more cost effective solution to fully fund the state’s capital program for state roads, bridges & tunnels. Trying to saying it will go bankrupt is a misleading statement aimed at raising gasoline taxes for no other reason than a new tax to fund pet union projects

This is a bold faced union lie. In recent years the fund has supported $1.2B in annual construction, maintenance and operating costs at NJ Transit and the state DoT. This despite TTF owing more than $30B in principal and interest on their debt, piled up by politicians in Trenton. The TTF is fully able to support the current capital program as originally proposed in the current five-year authorization, and will be able to do so if it is reauthorized again from July 1st. Too bad if the funds raised from the gasoline tax and toll charges are actually used for actual state road, bridge & tunnel repairs.

The politicians and unions don’t like that because they’ve been using the TTF as a piggy bank to fund their pet projects and to funnel graft payments to favored firms like Sarlo pal Sanzari. NJ spends 3X more than any other state to maintain state roads (surprise, surprise!) and that’s exactly why Senate President Sweeney says things like, “Judgment day is here, and we need to fund the TTF.” It’s how he buys votes and without more funds he loses that ability. They want to burden all NJ residents and commuters with higher gasoline taxes to fund their vote buying machine, and they are unwilling to discuss how the TTF rang up $30B in debt by overpaying union labor for road work & repairs. It’s nothing more than a scam to steal money from our pockets.

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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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Why does the Transportation Trust Fund need more funding?

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February 6,2016

the staff of the Ridgewood blog

Ridgewood NJ, Not a single question about the reason why the Transportation Trust Fund needs more funding, not one. When it costs the state over $2 million per mile of state road, 3 TIMES more than the next highest state, then something is wrong. And the NJ gas tax is only part of the story. Add in toll road, bridge & tunnel charges, and commuter pass costs and NJ residents already pay some of the highest transportation-related taxes in the country. There’s no support for this until state road work is opened up to non-union labor, and a full review of administrative & excess costs is complete.

Before Trenton thinks about raising the Gas Tax we also need :

1) We need a full audit and full accounting of the Transportation Trust Fund
2) We need a full Audit and full accounting of all the “Stimulus ” spending in New Jersey
3) A guarantee that any money raise will ONLY GO TO ROAD TRANSPORTATION PROJECTS !
4) A Full Audit of all the current sources of Financing the Transportation Trust Fund TTF

As if common knowledge that keeping more money in American’s pockets will pump more money into the economy isn’t enough, here are 5 more reasons not to raise the gas tax:

1. An increase in gas taxes will hurt middle-income Americans the most.Middle-income families make up roughly one-third of Americans. By increasing the gas tax, not only are you lessening the amount of money in their pockets, but the amount of money being pumped into the economy is being lessened too. It’s estimated that a 1 percent increase in gas prices takes $1 billion out of consumers’ pockets. That’s $1 billion dollars that could be spent on eating out, clothes, and leisure activities.

2. Raising the gas tax will likely encourage more non-highway related spending. Revenue from the tax would go to the HTF. One would think money from the HTF would be funding highways but instead, HTF funds have supported squirrel sanctuaries, landscaping, trail hikers and trolley riders. In fact spending on side projects has increased 38% since 2008 while spending on core highway projects has remained flat.

3. Raising the gas tax will not solve the real problem. The problem is that there is a funding deficit because the HTF is spending more money than they are bringing in. Currently the gas tax brings in around $34 billion annually, yet the federal government is spending roughly $50 billion each year. There is no solution in the “raise gas taxes” method. Tax proponents claim raising the tax would close the deficit and cover future, necessary funding from the HTF. However there is no guarantee for either of these things. More likely than not, this solution would only support and encourage more wasteful spending.

4. A gas tax hike will increase the price of consumer goods. The transportation of goods is primarily done via highways. Cars drive on highways and gas fuels cars. It’s a no-brainer that raising the gas tax will cost drivers more to fuel their way to deliver goods. Higher gas taxes, leading to higher gas prices will mean a higher cost on goods. This means increased financial pressure on middle to lower-income families if tax advocates get their way with this regressive increase in the gas tax.

5. Tax hikes have a negative impact on economic growth. As discussed, higher gas taxes mean higher gas prices which reduce the discretionary income of millions of Americans.  Reductions in discretionary income often correspond with diminished economic growth. In fact, analysts at Goldman Sachs predict “lower gas prices could add as much as half a percentage point to GDP growth this year.” (https://www.atr.org/top-five-reasons-not-raise-gas-tax )

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N.J. Democrats propose massive gas tax increase to replenish transportation fund

New Jersey Democrats Move to Raise Taxes

What happened to the STIMULUS Money ?

Time to audit the Transportation Trust Fund

FEBRUARY 3, 2016, 5:20 PM    LAST UPDATED: WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 3, 2016, 6:12 PM
BY JOHN C. ENSSLIN
STATE HOUSE BUREAU |
THE RECORD

New Jersey’s Democratic legislative leaders said Wednesday they are close to working out a proposal to fix the state’s dwindling Transportation Trust Fund.

Senate President Steve Sweeney, D-Gloucester, and Assembly Speaker Vincent Prieto, D-Secaucus, each said they just have a few details to work out on a proposal to replenish the fund – which pays for improvements to the state’s roads and bridges – runs out of money by June 30. Neither offered details of their plan.

But the two Democrats sparred with their Republican counterparts before an audience of several dozen mayors over the timing of such legislation.

Sweeney and Prieto said first they want to hash out a deal with Governor Christie – something they said has not yet happened – rather that pass a measure that he will veto.

“I don’t think anybody is going to go for something knowing the governor is not going to sign it,” Sweeney said during a panel discussion during the New Jersey League of Municipalities’ annual Mayors’ Legislative Day.

https://snip.ly/Xvs8#https://www.northjersey.com/news/n-j-democrats-say-proposal-to-replenish-transportation-fund-nearly-finished-1.1505096

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Slight Hike in Tax Revenue Adds Up to Surplus For State

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Gov. Chris Christie is scheduled to present his next state budget to lawmakers in less than two weeks. And it looks like he’ll be able to deliver that address feeling some confidence about how his spending plan for the current fiscal year is holding up. John Reitmeyer, NJSpotlight Read more

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Poll Finds 49% of New Jerseyans Favor Gas Tax Amendment

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file photo by Boyd Loving

A Fairleigh Dickinson poll released Monday find that 49 percent of New Jersey residents would support a proposed constitutional amendment dedicating gas tax revenue to the Transportation Trust Fund, the depleted funding source for the state’s roads and bridges. JT Aregood, PolitickerNJ Read more