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New Jersey Union Bill Approved By State Senate

New Jersey Union Bill

ANGELA DELLI SANTI and BETH DeFALCO   06/20/11 10:16 PM ET   AP

TRENTON, N.J. — The move to stabilize New Jersey's underfunded pension and health care systems by requiring public workers to pay sharply more for the benefits while suspending bargaining over health care was fast-tracked through the Legislature Monday, after Democrats joined with Republicans to buck the powerful public employee unions.

The Senate passed the bill 24-15 as a gallery full of raucous union members looked on; eight Democrats aligned with all 15 Republicans to pass the bill. An Assembly budget panel advanced the measure hours later, also without the majority party's support.

A vote by the full Assembly is set for Thursday. Gov. Chris Christie has already indicated his support.

"The time for political calculations is over," said Senate President Stephen Sweeney, a Democrat and member of the ironworkers' union, who sponsored the bill. "The time for passing the buck to someone else is over."

The Assembly Budget Committee approved the bill 7-5 after an eight-hour hearing that began with an impassioned plea from Assembly Speaker Sheila Oliver. Three Democrats paired with four Republicans; five Democrats voted `no.'

"This is the correct legislation for this moment," Oliver said. "This bill will ensure a strong future for our state."

The Republican governor, a driving force behind the landmark legislation, praised the Senate for its action.

"This is a watershed moment for New Jersey, proving that the stakes are too high and the consequences all too real to stand by and do nothing," he said in a written statement. "As a result of Democrats and Republicans coming together to confront the tough issues, we are providing a sustainable future for our pension and health benefit system, saving New Jersey taxpayers hundreds of billions of dollars and securing a fiscally responsible future for our state."

Sweeney and Oliver, also a Democrat, struck a deal with Christie and GOP legislative leaders to advance the bill. They rejected repeated calls from union leaders and Democrats to split the bill and force the governor to negotiate health care with the largest public worker union, the Communications Workers of America, whose contract expires June 30.

"You've made the governor not do his job," said Adam Liebtag a Communications Workers of America local president.

An amendment relaxing a potential deal-killer – a provision restricting public workers' access to out-of-state medical care unless similar care wasn't available in-state – was approved in the Senate, 24-14.

The change instructs new health care boards to create insurance plans that include only in-state providers, as well as options that include coverage for out-of-state providers. Employees could choose the plan they want, but more extensive benefits would cost more.

Senate Majority Leader Barbara Buono was among many to question the effectiveness of the last-minute change.

"I don't think there is any physician that would knowingly sign this certification," she said. "It doesn't need to be watered down. It doesn't need to be amended. It needs to be stricken."

The employee benefits legislation requires a half-million teachers, police, firefighters and other public workers to pay a portion of their health insurance premiums based on income. Pension contributions would also rise, by 1 percent immediately, and by an additional percent or more after a seven-year phase-in. Automatic cost-of-living increases on pensions would disappear, for now.

The average New Jersey public worker – who earns $60,000 and contributes $900 toward health care – would see their yearly health care costs rise to $2,056 for single coverage or $3,230 for a family plan, after a four-year phase-in.

The legislation is intended to shore up underfunded retirement systems, which are short of eventual liabilities by a combined $110 billion.

Bill Dressel, the head of New Jersey's League of Municipalities, told lawmakers the state's unfunded pension liability is "a ticking time bomb" that they now have a chance to defuse.

Sweeney estimates the pension savings at $120 billion over 30 years and the health care savings at $3 billion over 10 years. However, the law contains a sunset provision that allows collective bargaining to resume over health care in four years. A Treasury official testified last week that the health care portion of the bill would save $10 million the first year, not the $323 million Christie's budget anticipates.

Public-sector unions remain vehemently opposed to the legislation, in part, because it limits collective bargaining over health care. They also say the bill does nothing to contain health care costs, like encouraging bulk purchasing, and is being steam-rolled through the Legislature. Hundreds turned out at the Capitol on Monday for another day of protests that started with a march across the Delaware River into Trenton.

"You can spin this legislation any way you want, but the bottom line is this legislation circumvents the collective bargaining process," said Dominick Marino, president of the Professional Firefighters Association of New Jersey. "Don't kid yourselves, this bill is anti-labor. It is in no way a bill that helps labor, nor is it the right thing to do."

More than 3,000 public workers showed up at the Statehouse Thursday to protest when the bill was up for a vote in a Senate committee.

"This is the defining moment for the labor movement in our generation," New Jersey AFL-CIO President Charles Wowkanech wrote in an email to enlist support for Monday's rally, the latest of several recent Capitol protests.

The provision to allow collective bargaining over health care to resume after four years did little to quell union objections. Objections also did not diminish over any attempt to limit access to out-of-state care.

The effort to limit public employees' collective bargaining rights has gained momentum in other states. The GOP-led effort in Wisconsin calls for public workers to pay more for health and pension benefits beginning in late August unless a lawsuit by a coalition of unions is successful.

In Ohio, Gov. John Kasich in March signed a law limiting bargaining rights, which has yet to go into effect. And in Michigan, the Republican state Senate has passed 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.

The Massachusetts House passed a bill in late April stripping public-sector unions of the right to bargain over health care.

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TRENTON, N.J. — The move to stabilize New Jersey's underfunded pension and health care systems by requiring public workers to pay sharply more for the benefits while suspending bargaining over h...
TRENTON, N.J. — The move to stabilize New Jersey's underfunded pension and health care systems by requiring public workers to pay sharply more for the benefits while suspending bargaining over h...
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COMMUNITY PUNDITS
Bronxdude 04:44 PM on 06/20/2011
In Citizens United v. Federal Election Commission, the Supreme Court conferred new dignity on “corporate persons,” treating them—under the First Amendment free-speech clause—as equal to human beings. The Supreme Court’s 5-4 ruling overturned laws banning certain political spending by corporations. As predicted, this ruling has opened the door for corporations like Koch Industries to literally buy  Read More...
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Snookhookr
Get off my lawn......
03:23 PM on 06/28/2011
Christie is bringing fiscal sanity to the state of New Jersey. The salaries and benefits of the public union employees was unsustainable.

God bless you, Governor Christie. America needs more responsible politicians like you.
04:21 PM on 06/21/2011
Collective bargening has NO place being legislated!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! Period!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! what the heck is going on in this country?? Our Goverment is telling us what to do or rather what we can or cannot do on more and more matters, may as well rip up the Constituion, for the ppl, by the ppl..not anymore???
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
csnyfan13
E pluribus unum
01:17 PM on 06/22/2011
It's the Conservative Contradiction" - they want to get government out of the private sector yet rely upon government to do their dirty work or at least ignore what they are doing. It is a basic tenet of capitalism that workers will get paid fairly and work under optimal conditions. Then, the workers will buy consumer goods. This will in turn increase the profit of the manufacturing sector. When workers are respected they will take pride in what they do and increase the quality of manufactured goods. The conservatives *say* they want "capitalism" to work. However, this is only a masquerade of their greed. In the long term they will fail because who are they gonna get to work for them undeeer miserable and unhealthy conditions?
06:12 PM on 06/25/2011
i agree with you 100%~ NJ sux!!
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Snookhookr
Get off my lawn......
03:36 PM on 06/28/2011
What's going on in this country Jo Jo......unions are bankrupting the states with their unsustainable benefits and salaries and the state citizens are fighting back.
Union GREED is what's happening. Democrat greed. For without unions funneling campaign money to them Democrats are at a disadvantage. It's a money laundering scheme to keep Democrat politicians in place and to enrich union bosses.
04:45 PM on 06/28/2011
The frist thing the Rebubs do when they get in office is cut funds to the ppl who can least afford it as Governor Christi did. If the State of NJ would have put thier share into the Pension funds all these past years & not used the money from it that my son and other family members paid into for many years it would have never been bankrupt, I am sick of ppl demonizing Unions when it is the politicians who r the real crooks! sorry we will have to agree to disagree on this issue as I will never budge, Chrisit lied to the State workers (I have in bookmarked) when he siad he would never touch thier pensions!! end of story 4 me...
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Veganie
Live food, live bodies
02:53 PM on 06/21/2011
Darn beckerheads, they must have let the fourth grade out early today
01:51 PM on 06/21/2011
Well, we tried.
12:37 PM on 06/21/2011
Funny thing about this union bashing is that the core concept behind it is that union workers are running American companies out of business or over seas. When pressed they can't name a single company run out of business by the workers, nor can they explain exactly how the American worker is suppose to underbid the Chinese workers 17 cents an hour.
For those of us who are sane and reasonable we know the constant attacks on unions are simply to drive down American wages or blame Americans for exportation of jobs when in reality the corporations aren't going to pass up cheap Chinese labor for anything we have to offer.
Got news for all you stooges that have bought this line about unions, if you succeed in destroying all the unions in America and eliminate any negotiating power any American worker has it will not end. Not only will the jobs keep going to China but they will then direct their attacks on the EPA (costs money to dispose of waster properly) and OSHA (again, costs money to ensure worker safety). It will never, ever, end. Not until we are all impoverished third world sweatshop workers will these people stop.
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12:52 PM on 06/21/2011
No one is bashing private unions which is what your comment is based on which has nothing to do with the article over public unions.
01:21 PM on 06/21/2011
What are you talking about? People are all up and down this thread bashing all unions in every sector public and private.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Mplsuptown
02:08 PM on 06/21/2011
Many public employees have with their unioins given major concessions to their government employers for well over a decade. Minneapolis alone had a pay freeze for 5 years and the last few pay raises since have been well under the cost of living increase and inflations. Why aren't your accusations flying at the CEO's of major corporations instead?
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12:56 PM on 06/21/2011
Pretty sure GM and Chrysler would have gone under if the government had not bailed them out. Did the labor Unions make any concessions as a result of them almost going under? Asking, really don't know.

And none of that has anything to do with Labor unions for Public Employees. There is no management to negotiate with public employee unions, only politicians looking for support at the ballot box, and taxpayers picking up the bill.
01:20 PM on 06/21/2011
They made all kinds of concessions, this only happened a couple years ago you missed that? Look, it's simple logic, if your company makes "X" dollars in profit, who is stupid enough to demand "X+1" compensation? Union employees have as much interest in seeing their respective companies succeed and flourish as does the CEO and shareholders. Their fate is tied to the company as well. GM had many problems chief among them was the fact that they weren't selling cars. When things got tight the union gave up concessions and did their part.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
aviandonn
My micro-bio is empty
11:19 AM on 06/21/2011
The American worker has lost a sense of his/her own worth and power. The business community has done an excellent job of convincing people who actually work for a living that they are responsible for all the problems businesses face and that they are, in fact, a burden.

The American worker has been cowed by being threatened with job loss if they demand to be treated with respect and rewarded for the true wealth producers that they are. A large percentage of this is due to the past success of unions in securing rights and living wages for workers. Once those were attained and the norm in the work place, business began to attack unions as the enemy of the working class. There goal is to undo those accomplishments.

To lie down and say good luck, you're not allowed to have a union or strike, ignores the whole history of a unions. They were born from abusive labor practices and subsistence wages. The union movement needs to be restarted almost from scratch. Somebody has to start somewhere and put it all on the line. Otherwise, you're not workers, you're serfs.
Sevilleaba
There is a sufficiency in the world for man's need
11:39 AM on 06/21/2011
““[In Ed Kilgore's 6/30/2003 article titled "Starving the Beast" he quotes Republican strategist­­, Grover Norquist, as stating that: "We are trying to change the tones in the state capitals..­.. toward bitter nastiness and partisansh­­­ip."

Well he and Republican's are certainly succeeding in turning the citizen's of the this country into bitter and nasty partisans. The attitude now is "my job is more important than your job" and the person who has a employee benefit package better than mine, is the culprit. Now the enemy is public service workers. Whom will it be next?????
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
aviandonn
My micro-bio is empty
11:57 AM on 06/21/2011
Exactly. This is simply the divide and conquer strategy. If you can a group of people who should be natural allies to turn on each other, you can fracture them to the point where their numbers prevent them from exercising meaningful influence and you can tilt the balance of power to make them an irrelevant factor in your decision making. The American worker is willingly allowing himself to be defined as expendible, as an obstacle to profits, and as ungrateful for expecting fair compensation for their contributions to their employers wealth. There is no bottom to this self-embraced downward spiral. There is no minimal wage, no minimum level of exploitation that will cause the corporate mentality to say - enough, that's as low as we're going to push you. They will continue to push until the American workers decide to collectively push back.
04:11 PM on 06/21/2011
well said...touche' !! demonizing ppl like my son who is a State Corrections Officer and works his butt off only to be cut in pay, health benefits and forced to contribute even more money to his pension when the State of NJ has NOT given a dime to it in years is shameful...the State steals the money my son and all the other memebrs put in to the fund and they tell members that they have to put more money in to sustain it...pure bullcrap... I dispise Governor Christi!
alunsulen
Digging the liberal hatred!
07:43 AM on 06/22/2011
The state steals money from the taxpayers to give public union workers benefits they don't deserve. Despise him all you want, but the taxpayers of NJ are not going to foot the bill for this nonsense any longer.
09:02 PM on 06/25/2011
well said Aviadonn!
snapperhead
Freedom isn't free. Where's the invoice?
11:18 AM on 06/21/2011
After one governor changed the way the interest on the pension fund is calculated, the next governor signs a law, effectively 'raiding' the pension over the protestations of democrats and union members, then the state fails to contribute to the fund something like 15 out of 18 years. So we arrive at this point, asking the union members to pay in the states share, along with their own, which they have paid without interruption. I sometimes wonder if this doesn't send the message that not holding up your end of a deal is ok, others will pay for the foolishness of 'conservatives.'

It is dishonest, and shows a lack of integrity.

Norcross is the problem the Democrats in New Jersey need to address.
04:14 PM on 06/21/2011
EXACTLY!! NJ has NOT contribued thier share in years and they want union members to pay even more now.....the sight and sound of Gov, Christi makes me literally sick to my stomach!!!!!!!!!!!!
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GOPsLieAboutEverything
Lifetime Member of the Reality Based Community
11:12 AM on 06/21/2011
Isn't is amazing how a union story brings out the k0chsuck3rs like flies to manure???

The teabaggers 15 minutes is OVER!!! .... Good riddance to bad tr@$h!!!
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11:42 AM on 06/21/2011
Use English much?
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12:53 PM on 06/21/2011
Yes, we know you are uneducated.
This comment has been removed due to violations of our [Guidelines]
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GOPsLieAboutEverything
Lifetime Member of the Reality Based Community
11:07 AM on 06/21/2011
When Dems fall asleep they end up with DINOs .... If they stay asleep you end up with NJ, MI, WI.

Either primary the sellouts or zip it! .... Sick and tired of Dems complaining about the results of their lack of involvement.
11:19 AM on 06/21/2011
it is more than NJ, MI and WI. Other states like MA have done the same and its Democrats that are doing it.

Its about fiscal responsibility - something you apparently could care less about.....
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
flyingfortresb17
11:05 AM on 06/21/2011
Good going New Jersey!!!! Now it is time to limit more and more of the Unions' ability to make those working within a union business join the union when they do not wish to do so. The only people who get rich in a unionized company are the union bosses.
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wolfml1
making sense out of a senseless world
10:58 AM on 06/21/2011
Republicans have got to Go! Recall, Recall, Recall.......!
10:59 AM on 06/21/2011
LOL
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12:57 PM on 06/21/2011
So do the democrats but you prove you can cry louder.
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HUFFPOST PUNDIT
den1953
The best politicians are for free!
10:46 AM on 06/21/2011
All those unions should join force and have their own health insurance policy and tell these Governors to shove it where the sun don't shine, when they are established they should strike for higher wages and shut down the states!
11:01 AM on 06/21/2011
good luck with that silly idea. some jobs don't allow strikes - and remember Reagan......
10:43 AM on 06/21/2011
The Dems cannot win elections with their bought union members. The Democrats need to import millions of illegals who swear their allegiance to the DNC rather than the United States of America. That why unions are becoming an indangered species: Cheap labor/Cheap votes!
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HUFFPOST PUNDIT
den1953
The best politicians are for free!
10:42 AM on 06/21/2011
This just answers that question that republicans need those insurance companies to contribute to there campaign coffers, to fight that hard to force employees to accept the states ability to force health care of their choice seems to be no different then making every American have health insurance. This is why America needs a single payer law and stop the insurance companies pay to play politics with the States, i wonder how much campaign funding these Governors stand to get from the insurance companies?
11:02 AM on 06/21/2011
Hey Unions - get your own insurance - have fun picking up the tab
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
spriddler
11:42 AM on 06/21/2011
State governments are self insured. They use health insurance companies based on their discounts and claims processing abilities. Insurance companies do not raise rates on self insured entities like they do for fully insured entities. Self insured entities generally set rates for a new year based on a percentage of COBRA costs which are themselves based on the prior year's cost per member and expected healthcare inflation.