As reported on trentonian.com, New Jersey Governor Chris Christie held fast to his national reputation for fiscal discipline amid the widespread financial crisis that has hit the United States, unveiling a $29.4 billion state budget that calls for heftier contributions from state workers for pension and health care benefits.
Christie proposes paying $500 million into the state’s severely underfunded pension system, the minimum required under a new state law to get the state to quit skipping its payments. But Christie says he’ll make the payment only if the Democratic Legislature agrees to reforms that require government workers to delay retirement and pay more. Union workers, a powerful Democratic constituency in a legislative election year, oppose the plan.
Christie’s carrot-and-stick budget plan also targets public workers’ health care. His plan calls for additional property tax credits to poor, disabled and senior households, but only if the Legislature significantly increases public workers’ health insurance contribution. Specifically, Christie wants legislation that would push one-third of the cost of health insurance onto state workers by 2014, up significantly from the 1.5 percent of their salary they pay now. Christie would apply the $323 million in savings to property tax relief for low-income, senior and disabled homeowners.
Unions plan to rally at the Statehouse on February 25, 2011 in support of public workers in Wisconsin, where protests have erupted over collective bargaining rights and public employees’ benefits are among the issues raising ire. In a speech at the American Enterprise Institute in Washington, Christie urged elected officials to follow his example in addressing spending and debt, and big-ticket items such as pensions and other benefits. “It’s time to do the big things-the really big things,” he said.
In New Jersey, Democratic leaders in the Legislature complained that Christie, through his budget, pits one group of middle-class residents against another. However, the League of Municipalities, an association of municipal mayors, says it’s pleased Christie’s budget proposal holds the line on spending and aid to towns.