The
Nightmare on State Street-Budget 2008
President Carla
Katz | February 26, 2008
Accepting the Oscar
for his leading role in the budget adaptation of "There Will
Be Blood" is Governor Jon Corzine. This was a budget speech that
reached out and stabbed nearly every constituency and hacked at countless
services that the public holds dear. As intended, the Governor's speech
was grim, sobering and gory. It was also dead wrong.
Slashing thousands
of jobs of middle class workers, who had nothing to do with getting
the state in this fiscal fix, is grossly unfair. More to the point,
it doesn't save money, it doesn't attack patronage and it ultimately
hurts all families in New Jersey. My local union, representing thousands
of public workers, vehemently opposes these cuts and we intend to
vigorously fight against them.
We've seen this movie before starring Governors past. As horror
films go, each sequel gets bloodier. This year's version, seemingly
written with a chainsaw, proposes to eliminate between 4,000 and
5,000 hard-working middle class workers while failing to present
any real solution to state's ongoing fiscal problems. These cuts
will be devastating to the critical services that our members provide
to the public and which the public values.
To make matters
worse, the proposed job cuts follow on the heels of a severe two-year
hiring freeze which has left many essential programs at bare bones
levels already. The Governor's proposal, which eliminates thousands
of important jobs without realistic backfilling, will dramatically
cut services across all departments and will degrade the ability
of the workers who remain to perform their jobs well.
New Jersey's
'hidden government' is where the cutting should start. Currently,
the state has 8,000 employees on the TES (temporary employee services)
list performing the work of regular state workers and costing more
than $100 million dollars. Additionally, thousands of political
appointees remain on the payroll and private consultants and subcontractors
continue to perform state work at a much higher cost to the public.
These "hidden" workers are exempted from the published
'head count' which has allowed Governors to boast of 'reducing the
state workforce' by eliminating state worker jobs while allowing
private consultants and temporary employees performing that same
work under the radar.
It is true that
many politicians have spent decades ignoring fiscal realities and
have borrowed like shopaholics with somebody else's credit cards.
Public workers want to be a part of a real solution to the state's
fiscal problems and have already suffered hundreds of millions of
dollars in concessions in the last year alone. It is also true that
the state needs a 'holistic' approach (as the Governor often says)
to our address our budget weaknesses and our staggering debt. However,
are massive job cuts really a 'holistic' solution when those cuts
'save' $134 million dollars in this year's budget but 'cost' $300
million dollars in increased pension costs? And realistically, does
eliminating 4,000 decent jobs stimulate New Jersey's economy? No,
and no.
Taking a chainsaw
to the state's budget, in the hopes of keeping it alive long term,
will simply not work. Attacking working families and the middle
class, yet again, is not acceptable and not the right answer. The
screaming has just begun.
Just a few of the services which could face the knife
- Finding jobs for returning
veterans
- Screening newborns for genetic and biochemical diseases
- Weekend hours at Motor Vehicles
- Providing temporary disability for citizens who are hurt and cannot
work
- Enforcing child labor laws
- Protecting our air and water
- Recreation, camping, swimming, and investment in our State Parks
system
- Ensuring the safety of our schools
- Inspecting and licensing long-term care facilities and nursing
homes
- Protecting the safety of our food supply
- Protecting farmland from development and preserving it for future
agricultural use
- Distributing surplus federal foods to soup kitchens and pantries
that serve the needy
- Protecting NJ's children from abuse and neglect
- Administering the senior prescription drug assistance programs
- Attracting new jobs to our state
- Conserving precious soil and water resources
And
many, many more...
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