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Chris Christie Anti-Union Bill In New Jersey Would Restrict Collective Bargaining Rights

Chris Christie Union Bill New Jersey

By ANGELA DELLI SANTI and BETH DeFALCO   06/ 8/11 07:13 PM ET   AP

TRENTON, N.J. -- New Jersey's Republican governor and Democratic state Senate president reached a deal Wednesday on legislation that would make public employees pay more for pension and health benefits, but Assembly Democrats refused to go along, leaving the bill's prospects in doubt.

The deal, which would have to be passed by both houses, is intended to shore up the underfunded systems by requiring bigger contributions from all public workers beginning July 1, a person who has been briefed told The Associated Press. The person insisted on anonymity because the deal has not been made official.

It also would mean that public workers' health benefits would be legislated, not negotiated, as they are now. Gov. Chris Christie has been pushing for legislative changes; union leaders have been opposed.

"This proposal destroys collective bargaining," said Hetty Rosenstein, state director of the Communication Workers of America, which has 55,000 state and local members. "It's completely unaffordable for anybody – it does not one thing to actually save health care dollars, all it does is shift them."

Senate President Stephen Sweeney said the plan is a fair balance between employee and taxpayer interests.

But Democrats who control the Assembly left a closed-door caucus meeting Wednesday without agreeing to support any bill legislating health benefits for union workers, a person who was in the session told The Associated Press. The person insisted on anonymity because the meeting was private.

New Jersey is among several states where Republican governors have moved to restrict collective bargaining.

In Wisconsin, a lawsuit is before the state Supreme Court over a law that calls for almost all public workers to contribute more to their health care and pensions and strips them of nearly all their collective bargaining rights. A new law signed by Ohio Gov. John Kasich in March limits bargaining by public employee unions, affecting about 350,000 police, firefighters, teachers and other public workers. The Ohio law has not yet gone into effect and opponents are collecting signatures in an effort to put the issue on the November ballot.

In Michigan, the Republican state Senate has passed and sent to the House measures to require most public employees to cover at least 20 percent of the cost of buying their health insurance coverage, with some flexibility for local bargaining units.

Collective-bargaining changes may be a harder sell in New Jersey, where Democrats control the Legislature and all 120 legislators are up for re-election in November.

"It's my personal opinion that (health benefits) should be done at the bargaining table," Assemblyman John McKeon, a northern New Jersey Democrat, said after the caucus meeting.

Assembly Speaker Sheila Oliver acknowledged the lack of agreement among her 47 members in a statement issued late Wednesday.

"I continue to believe that we need health benefits reform to protect taxpayers, but I have maintained all along that there needed to be significant support in my caucus to move forward. We are not there yet," Oliver said. She said talks would continue.

There is more support among Assembly Democrats to increase workers' pension contributions, but the lawmakers haven't agreed to specific legislation, according to the person who attended the meeting.

Christie's office did not respond to messages for comment throughout the day.

New Jersey's pension and retirement health systems are both underfunded by tens of billions of dollars. The proposal is designed to reduce the long-term indebtedness of both systems.

One provision of the deal would require the state to make its annual pension payment. Governors of both parties have skipped or greatly reduced their pension contribution in most of the past 20 years.

The deal would raise pension contributions immediately by at least 1 percent for public workers such as local police and firefighters; teachers; state police; and state, county and municipal workers. Judges, who now put 3 percent of salary toward their pensions, the least of any public worker group, would see that amount increase to 12 percent.

The deal also would require employees to pay more for health care under a new salary-based contribution formula that would be phased in over four years. The rate would be as high as 35 percent of the cost of the premium for top wage earners and as low as 3 percent for the lowest-paid employees. Most workers now pay 1.5 percent of their salary toward health care regardless of the cost of their plan.

Under the proposal, which is subject to change, public workers earning $40,000 would pay 7 percent of the cost of their health insurance for a family plan or 14 percent for single coverage, after the phase-in.

The proposed state budget for the fiscal year that starts July 1 relies on more than $300 million in savings from health benefits reforms.

Jeffrey Keefe, a labor and employment relations associate professor at New Jersey's Rutgers University, argues that state and local workers are generally undercompensated compared with their private-sector counterparts.

"They are compensated differently," he said. "Public workers earn lower wages given their level of education but generally get better benefits," he said, noting that they don't get to participate in things like profit-sharing.

___

Associated Press writers Tim Martin in Lansing, Mich., Scott Bauer in Madison, Wis., and JoAnne Viviano in Columbus, Ohio, contributed to this report.

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TRENTON, N.J. -- New Jersey's Republican governor and Democratic state Senate president reached a deal Wednesday on legislation that would make public employees pay more for pension and health benefit...
TRENTON, N.J. -- New Jersey's Republican governor and Democratic state Senate president reached a deal Wednesday on legislation that would make public employees pay more for pension and health benefit...
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COMMUNITY PUNDITS
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DrObvious 12:19 PM on 06/09/2011
Republicans want to take health care coverage away from citizens, Democrats want to ensure everybody has access. It is that clear cut. We could beat the spiraling cost of health care if we used a single-payer approach in the USA, used the purchasing power of government to get better deals on everything bought in health care. We could also un-do the patent extensions that pharmaceutical companies bought for  Read More...
02:10 PM on 06/20/2011
To my private-union friends who rail against public unions, how about if those of us who don't belong to unions seek the government to make New Jersey a "right-to-work" state? Put the shoe on the other foot? After all, union requirements take jobs away from the workforce, plus the increased cost of labor and benefits (where have we heard that?) makes our goods and services, especially those we pay for with out tax dollars, more expensive!
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unwashedmasses
RECALL WALKER
01:22 AM on 06/18/2011
New Jersey, it's a toss-up for me who is the greater tyyrant, Christie or Scott Walker.
I wish you the best of luck and I hope you don't give in, either.
Most people think the ordeal is finished in Wisconsin, but there has been a sizable suit filed in Federal Court, and we are about to vote on the recall of 6 republican state senators, and the recall of Scott Walker as soon as it is legal.
Truthfully, this situation will go on for years rather than months. Not my choice, but we are not giving away the state we love to a bunch of radicals.
12:55 PM on 06/11/2011
The people of the USA are under attach from the Republican Party and so called Tea Party, to curd our right to "LIFE", "LIBERTY" and the "PURSUIT OF HAPPINESS". This country was created by wealthy people, who had the welfare of all the people in their hearts and minds. The actions of today's Republicans has nothing to do with this countries fiscal welfare. They only believe in how much they can direct to the big business and rich friends, to make them even richer, so these politicians will reap more lobbyist money for their own pockets.
11:21 AM on 06/10/2011
It is funny to watch CC get frustrated with the political institution that exists in the Garden State. Did he actually think that he was going to improve the lives of his constituency? These politicians are so cute at that age. CC isn't a leader, he's a lawyer, used to doing other peoples' dirty work. His main weakness of not being able to build a consensus for anything will be the reason that NJ taxpayers will continue getting it from behind. And know this, it'll be the same thing under the next govenor, whether Rep/Dem, conservative/liberal, black/blue/green, or a transgender Bruce Springsteen impersonator that sells taffy outside AC's Convention Hall. NJ and Feckless Politicians...Perfect Together!
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
George R Williams
Publius Cincinatus
08:35 AM on 06/10/2011
"They are compensated differently," he said. "Public workers earn lower wages given their level of education but generally get better benefits," he said, noting that they don't get to participate in things like profit-sharing."

Shocking. Perhaps it's because their employers don't risk losing their investments and public workers don't actually produce a product that has to make a profit? Public employees aren't like employees in private enterprise because the latter's wages depend upon the success of the investors. If profits go down, private enterprise employees make less money. That's not the case for public employees who risk nothing if their productivity is low.
09:18 PM on 06/10/2011
The anti-union crowd is truly amazing. They bemoan the "power" of the public unions and the union negotiated benefits. These negotiations are not a one-way street, obvviously. The politically-appointed managers sat on the other side of the table. If they were out-maneuvered and out-negotiated -- that's the fault of the politicians who appointed them. If the politicians are unhappy with their appointed negotiators -- LET THEM GET BETTER NEGOTIATORS. That means the elected official should appoint his buddies only if the buddies are competent. (Sometimes, that actually happens!) Unfortunately, it's much more appealing to just eliminate the right to negotiate; then you can nominate all the incompetents who contributed to your campaign -- union problem solved!
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Zeev10
07:43 AM on 06/10/2011
If his finger is wagging , you know he is lying! He is also one of the most anti- women politician I have ever seen . What is that all about? He should be on his knees thanking his wife who is the big breadwinner in that household.
03:39 AM on 06/10/2011
There is a choice: either pay the Public Service Union members what they want or have a State that is not a cesspool in many areas.
06:06 AM on 06/10/2011
How about have the citizens actually *pay* a fair value for the services rendered to them? The state is not broke, it just refuses to have the most affluent among them pay their fair share.

Well, that and it is more levels of government redundancy than are necessary. Cut the number of school districts, have law enforcement and fire fighting based on land area instead of incorporation status (does *every* "town" need to have their own police force, with attendant levels of bureaucracy?). Oh, and how about slash the pay/benefits of elected officials?
Berettasskeeter
For what we are about to receive, may we be truly
12:31 PM on 06/10/2011
State government doesn't control town government. It is the people of the town that vote to incorporate, thus to having taxes to pay for police. The purest form of democracy.
Semper fi
03:33 AM on 06/10/2011
For 20 years the heavily Democratic State did not provide for the pensions. Who was screaming then !!!
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
AlbertT
07:07 AM on 06/10/2011
Republican Governor Whitman was the one who started stiffing the pension fund.
Berettasskeeter
For what we are about to receive, may we be truly
12:32 PM on 06/10/2011
What has that to do with the remainder of the 20 years? She started it? Okay, but does that excuse those who continued it after her??
Semper fi
02:27 AM on 06/10/2011
stick together............the working people of this country will prevail..............SOLIDARITY FOREVER
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Charles R Tait
12:01 PM on 06/10/2011
Solidarity? While you make less and pay towards your benefits, the UNION increases your dues and takes your money. You have to ask yourself, do unions still represent what they once were, or is it a business that for the most part, just collects money from millions of people to run a business? I am not anti-union...just posing a question.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
praymondc
praymondc
01:48 AM on 06/10/2011
Left to the republicans, Capitalism would become the dictatorial government for American workers.
Every employee should have a say, a bagaining position, regarding the work he performs and services he provides. No matter how arrogant, greedy and self serving capitalists are, the labor unions will alway be around to protect the rights and benefits of working Americans... Any party or government that would destroy basic worker (human) rights will be removed from powers thru the electorial process... We call it representative government, plain and simple. This why voting is so very important.
Berettasskeeter
For what we are about to receive, may we be truly
12:34 PM on 06/10/2011
Every employee DOES have a say. First, the say is in whether to work for any particular employer (after all, NO ONE is forced to work for any particular entity). Second, every employee may negotiate his/her salary. Naturally, the negotiation may fail.
What "basic" workers rights are being destroyed by asking employees to contribute more to their pension and health plans?
Semper fi
12:52 PM on 07/01/2011
You are forgetting the history of company towns and company scrip. Try to quit? Get shot.
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Trublulu
12:54 AM on 06/10/2011
Christie started out being this Faux News media darling. Teapublicans begged him to run for president after only a few months as governor. However, since recent displays of arrogance and ignorance, including his latest jaunt on a taxpayer paid helicopter to his son's baseball game, Christie is fading fast. He comes across as a loud-mouth bully, pushing around middle class government workers like police officers, teachers, fire-fighters and low paid secretaries. The more he opens his mouth, the more his popularity drops.
Berettasskeeter
For what we are about to receive, may we be truly
12:35 PM on 06/10/2011
If it is unacceptable for Christie to commute to his son's games, is it likewise unacceptable for Obama to use government transport for his family?
Semper fi
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shocktreatment
Just barely standing it
10:15 PM on 06/15/2011
You must be kidding. Yeah, the US citizenry would be far better served if our President and Commander in Chief, his protective detail, the electronics, both protective and communications, the "football", etc all flew commercial. Maybe they could come up with ECM and other countermeasures, chaff, flares, whatever, that the Secret Service could just wheel from plane to plane... but then the conservatards would be barking about flight delays and excess baggage charges.

Could they at least fly business class?
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Sheila Whitehead
sheilababe
12:38 AM on 06/10/2011
Think about level of educators having a poor grade average because u taxpayers are too caught up on how much each state is taxed fir teachers. Poor education, stupid kids and teachers underpsid. Sound like a republican? Then it is a Republican. Cristi will live to regret every union busting thing and cutting programs. He is a real wirk of garbage
12:33 AM on 06/10/2011
Good for Gov Christie, I hope he runs the state and business busting unions out of New Jersey. He can send them to California. Gov Moonbeam will embrace them. He's running his state into the ground.
02:26 AM on 06/10/2011
solidarity forever
03:36 AM on 06/10/2011
Gov moonbeam of California would love to have more union members, that way he can be re-elected.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
definately democrat
mommy's little batty girl
11:44 PM on 06/09/2011
In Ohio they are trying to pass the same bill, but the voter are getting petitions signed to have it put on ballot. We have Rep. Gov. Kasick, and he is SICK! He has now going to sign a bill (already signed in the house) that will allow people carrying gun permits to take guns into bars and restaurants. Now this is really smart. guns and alchohol do not mix. He is another Rep that keeps crying we are broke but whe he was elected he gave his staff (mostly his relatives) a $40,000 to $50,000 a year raise. He is going to cut school funding also, which is going to cut more jobs. We passes a bill to allow casinos and he is now going to tax them at a higher rate then was agreed on and that has stopped construction. he is doing our state in and has said he doesn't care if he is not re-elected. Another Republican dumbo.
11:40 PM on 06/09/2011
Over the years, rather than give government workers more money, the governments would offer benefits such as health care or pension plans. This way, the employee would gain, and the government could defer spending the money. Years after many years, this is how government worked. They put off payment of work performed now. This way, they avoided increasing taxes. The elected officials looked great. But many governments failed to put money aside for the future payments that the workers had already earned.

Now, when payments are due, or due in the near future, these Repulicans are making the employees who provided services, look like the bad guy. A past contract was made. The Republicans should not try to break that contract.

It is the same with Social Security and Medicare. Workers paid into this programs, with an agreement/contract to receive certain benefits in the future. Again, the Republicans want to break these contracts.

Moral of the story: Do not enter into contracts with Republicans. They can not be trusted to keep their part of the agreement.

Obama 2012!

GOD BLESS AMERICA!
06:12 AM on 06/10/2011
Well, not entirely, right? Because, if you are a bank executive that ran your voodoo enterprise into the ground we can't withhold *any* of your salary, and especially not your *bonuses* because those were contracts, and you can't break a contract! Unless you're an auto industry line worker...

So the moral really is: if you're rich, R's will protect your contract, but if not, screw you.
08:06 AM on 06/10/2011
Great point dr. I will have to modify my moral.

Obama 2012!

GOD BLESS AMERICA!