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Reader says As long as the employee remains employed, this astounding rate of increase is all but guaranteed

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Reader says As long as the employee remains employed, this astounding rate of increase is all but guaranteed

Why have we made such generous promises on accumulated sick leave to municipal employees ? Ridgewood employees receive 15 sick days per year (vs. 3~5 for the average U.S. employee). Unused days may be accumulated at current pay levels until retirement, at which time retirees may elect to take half the accumulated days off with pay (up to 3-6 months, depending on department) or receive an equivalent lump sum payment at the much higher pre-retirement compensation level. The allowed sick days are in addition to generous vacations, with a starting vacation benefit for Ridgewood employees of 12-13 days, depending on department, which can grow up to a maximum of 31 days. This compares to median full-time U.S. workers receiving only 13 days of paid leave per year. The FAC recommended that the maximum number of permitted paid sick days be reduced from 15 to 7 days per calendar year, and that all sick days (up to a maximum of seven) must be used during the calendar year. Unused sick days should NOT be accumulated beyond December 31st of the same calendar year, in which they are permitted. Sick days should not be transferrable to another employee.

In practice it looks like unionized municipal workers automatically get their annual negotiated wage increases, PLUS annual step wage increases, cost of living adjustments, longetivity bonuses, etc. The STEP schedules rapidly accelerate employees’ base salaries every year, particularly in the first 10 years of employment. One Ridgewood Step Schedule for employees hired after 2010 starts at a base salary of $32,000 in the first year of employment. Under the schedule, the base salary increases to $81,971 by the end of the fifth year of employment. This represents an incredible 156% increase or a compounded annual rate of increase over 20%. This does not include the publicly disclosed 4.2% annual wage increase or a 2% bonus after year four. As long as the employee remains employed, this astounding rate of increase is all but guaranteed. Although the agreements state that the annual increases are “not automatic”, employees expect them and, in practice, it is rare that they are not approved.

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Ridgewood supervisors stress staffing needs at budget hearings

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file photo Boyd Loving

Ridgewood supervisors stress staffing needs at budget hearings

APRIL 3, 2014    LAST UPDATED: THURSDAY, APRIL 3, 2014, 3:25 PM
BY BY DARIUS AMOS
STAFF WRITER

Ridgewood Council members and department supervisors continue to search for expense reductions as they work toward balancing the 2014 municipal budget. Their overall goal, which was achieved last year, is to introduce a plan that features a zero percent average tax increase.

Last Thursday, council members reviewed spending proposals from several smaller departments, including several overseen by Chris Rutishauser, head of Ridgewood’s Department of Public Works. Village Clerk Heather Mailander discussed the individual budgets of the departments that she directs.

The engineering division will incur one significant staffing expense, according to Rutishauser, who is hoping to promote a senior engineering aide to the position of principal engineering aide. The proposed personnel move has been requested to fill a vacancy created by a retirement in 2010.

Rutishauser, Ridgewood’s engineer, highlighted a spending decrease, noting that he budgeted for reduced spending on public works education and training, which was a $4,700 item.

– See more at: https://www.northjersey.com/community-news/ridgewood-supervisors-stress-staffing-needs-at-budget-hearings-1.841241#sthash.jNvEGeUU.dpuf

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Ridgewood police, fire departments present budget requests

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file photo by Boyd Loving

Ridgewood police, fire departments present budget requests

MARCH 27, 2014    LAST UPDATED: THURSDAY, MARCH 27, 2014, 3:35 PM
BY DARIUS AMOS
STAFF WRITER

Ridgewood police officials attribute the department’s proposed 7 percent spending increase, in part, to a spike in mandatory officer training and the imminent replacement of aging administration vehicles.

During a Village Council budget work session last week, Chief John Ward detailed the police department’s anticipated 2014 expenses contained within its $6.6 million budget. The heads of the fire and information technology departments also presented their individual budgets.

Work sessions resume on Thursday night.

– See more at: https://www.northjersey.com/community-news/ridgewood-police-fire-departments-present-budget-requests-1.752822#sthash.fKhq5ond.dpuf

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Village Council Public 2014 Budget Hearings – March 27, April 7, 10

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Village Council Public 2014 Budget Hearings – March 27, April 7, 10

The Village Council has scheduled several Public Budget Hearings to take place in Village Hall, 131 N. Maple Avenue, Ridgewood.

Wednesday, March 19 from 5 – 7PM in the Court Room;

Friday, March 21 from 5 – 7PM in the Court Room;

Thursday, March 27 from 5 – 9:30PM in the Senior Center;

Monday, April 7 from 5 – 7PM in the Court Room;

Thursday, April 10 from 5 to 10PM in the Senior Center

Departments Hearings:

March 19 – Overview of Budget, Community Services – Building Dept; Zoining, Health Dept, Tax Assessor.

March 21 – 5PM Police Department; 5:45PM Fire Department; 6:30PM MIS

March 27 – 5PM Village Council, 5:15 PM Insurance & Debt Service, 5:45PM Engineering, 7:30PM Traffic & Signal, W.P.C.F., Property Maintenance, Parking, Utilities, 7:30PM Municipal Clerk & Elections, 8PM NWBCD

April 7 – 5PM Municipal Court & Public Defender, 5:30PM Emergency Services, 5:45PM Emergency Management, 6PM Library, 6:45PM Village Manager

April 10 – 5PM Parks & Recreation, Project Pride, Graydon Pool, 6PM Streets, Fleet Services, Recycling, Yard Waste Recycling, Solid Waste, 7PM Water Dept., 7:45PM Finance, Tax Collection, Village Attorney

 

Financial Advisory Committee Meeting – April 7

Notice: The Financial Advisory Committee (FAC) will meet on Monday, April 7 instead of their standard of the 2nd Monday of the month. the meeting will take place at 7:30PM in the Garden Room, Village Hall.

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Ridgewood Council begins budget hearings

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Ridgewood Council begins budget hearings

MARCH 20, 2014    LAST UPDATED: THURSDAY, MARCH 20, 2014, 4:33 PM
BY DARIUS AMOS
STAFF WRITER

Ridgewood finance and management officials are working toward a second straight year with a zero percent average tax increase, but they indicated this week that individual departments must seek additional spending cuts to realize that goal.

The Village Council held its first municipal budget public work session Wednesday night, and in traditional fashion, several department supervisors presented and explained their wish lists for 2014.

The department budgets have already gone through at least one round of scrutiny by municipal officials.

Supervisors and other department heads filed their 2014 budgets with the acting village manager and chief finance officer late last year for an initial review and a first set of cuts and recommendations.

Members of the Ridgewood Financial Advisory Committee (FAC) were also a part of that process, according to Heather Mailander, the acting village manager.

– See more at: https://www.northjersey.com/community-news/ridgewood-council-begins-budget-hearings-1.746964#sthash.tiRhXFT5.dpuf

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Village Council Public 2014 Budget Hearings – March 19, 21, 27, April 7, 10

Ridgewood_-Village_Hall_theridgewoodblog.net_1

Village Council Public 2014 Budget Hearings – March 19, 21, 27, April 7, 10

The Village Council has scheduled several Public Budget Hearings to take place in Village Hall, 131 N. Maple Avenue, Ridgewood.

Wednesday, March 19 from 5 – 7PM in the Court Room;

Friday, March 21 from 5 – 7PM in the Court Room;

Thursday, March 27 from 5 – 9:30PM in the Senior Center;

Monday, April 7 from 5 – 7PM in the Court Room;

Thursday, April 10 from 5 to 10PM in the Senior Center

Departments Hearings:

March 19 – Overview of Budget, Community Services – Building Dept; Zoining, Health Dept, Tax Assessor.

March 21 – Police Department; Fire Department

Schedule to TBD for other departments

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Village Budget : Taxpayers On The Hook for Cell Phone Bills of 102 Village Employees

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During a municipal budget review held on Wednesday April 14th, Dylan Hansen, the Village’s Network Administrator, publically revealed that 102 Village of Ridgewood employees are currently using cell phones that were paid for by Ridgewood taxpayers. Additionally, all monthly usages fees, in connection with business and/or personal calls, are also paid by Ridgewood taxpayers.

Clearly, the Village Manager and Village Council were either asleep at the switch or absent when cell phones were distributed at Village Hall. It is not possible that there are 102 Village employees whose positions warrant unlimited business and personal use of taxpayer provided cell phone service. This is simply an outrageous situation that must be brought to an immediate end.

The Fly has several questions for the Village Council:

1) What is the percentage of Village employees who have taxpayer provided cell phone service?
2) What is the formal approval process for obtaining taxpayer provided cell phone service?
3) When an employee retires, resigns, or is terminated, is someone checking to make certain that taxpayers aren’t continuing to provide the individual with cell phone service?
4) Is there a list kept of who has these phones or do we just know that 102 are out there? Is the list available for public viewing?
5) Is the value of cell phone service for personal use being reported as income on W2 forms?

The Fly suggests that now is the right time for Village Council members to hang up most of the Village issued cell phones.

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