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Governor Chris Christie Reaffirms Commitment to Reform in Newark Public Schools

Governor Stresses Community Input and Gives Overview of Ongoing Process of Selecting a New Superintendent

Trenton, NJ – In a visit to Ann Street School this morning, Governor Chris Christie engaged in a conversation with students and members of Newark’s education community, reaffirmed his commitment to bringing fundamental reform to Newark Public Schools and underscored the importance of community involvement in reform efforts and the process of selecting a new superintendent.

 

“It has been 15 years since the State of New Jersey took over public schools in Newark with the hope of transforming the district and ending its failure of so many of our children. But a decade and a half later, with the exception of a few bright spots of progress, we have yet to achieve our goals of providing a quality education to every child.  The work of changing Newark’s education system did not begin the day I came into office, but I believe we have brought this issue into sharper focus in this Administration with our education reform efforts and partnership with the City and community at large,” said Governor Christie.  “As we endeavor to change the status quo, cooperation at every level – the State, the City’s leadership, Education Task Force, School Advisory Board and the whole community – will be critical to replicate the bright spots and successful models in this school district, and improve the public schools across this city. In partnership, I believe we will finally accomplish meaningful change and reform for the children of this city, and in areas across the state where opportunity is not being delivered.”

 

The Christie Administration has taken numerous, proactive steps to ensure that every opportunity for reform and progress is seized and that progress continues in Newark, even while the selection of a new superintendent is underway.  Rochelle Hendricks, who recently served as Acting Commissioner of the Department of Education, has assumed responsibility for the Newark Public Schools during this transition period.  Hendricks is a dedicated, accomplished education professional with the knowledge and background necessary to achieve progress during this interim period.  She is working closely with interim-superintendent Deborah Terrell to ensure that the district’s most pressing challenges are met with solutions as soon as possible.  Both are working closely with the educational and community leadership in Newark to deal with the serious challenges facing the district today, most specifically the budget gap and the shortage of quality schools.

 

Governor Christie also outlined the process being undertaken by the State, in cooperation with the Newark community, in the selection of a new superintendent for Newark Public Schools:

 

The next Superintendent of the Newark Public School system will send a strong signal to the community that Governor Christie and the Administration are serious about real reform and real results.  As a result, the process for choosing the next superintendent is built on transparency, community involvement and real input from educators. The selection process, already underway, for finding a qualified, dedicated superintendent has been set out to be broad, thorough and staged to allow for plenty of community input along the way.  

 

 

·         The first stage began in January when Acting Commissioner Cerf solicited names of top candidates in conversations with national reform leaders and local community leaders.

 

·         The second stage was to seek sound input and guidance from members of the community on critical education reform issues, ongoing and emergent challenges that will face the incoming superintendent, and the qualifications demanded of the next superintendent. This began the process of engaging a wide swath of people who live and work in the Newark community:

 

o    The School Advisory Board, headed by Shavar Jeffries, is the body elected by the people of Newark to represent them in the schools and a critical source of advice and counsel;

o    Mayor Cory Booker, who is providing valuable leadership as an advisor in the process, offering input and guidance into the reform challenges facing Newark schools, and lending his perspective in the superintendent search process;

o    The Education Task Force, a group of Newark community leaders who provide guidance around education policy and consist of leaders from Newark Public Schools, higher education, parents, the non-profit community, and the charter school community;

o    Various educational leaders, including principals, parent representatives and teachers; and

o    Local representatives, including members of the city council and the legislature.

 

Each one of these groups represents a different part of the City of Newark and its education and civic community. As such, through each stage of the process, they have provided and will continue to provide counsel on the needs of the Newark Public School System and the qualifications necessary for the next superintendent.

 

·         The final stage of this process, which is now beginning and will continue over the coming weeks, will allow for each of these groups to meet face to face with prospective candidates.

 

o    Finding the next superintendent of the Newark Public Schools can and must integrate a high level of community involvement and investment in the process. Bringing real change to education in the public schools begins and ends with the community; the community’s input will inform the recommendations ultimately made to Governor Christie for this vitally important decision. 

 

At that point, after sufficient time has been spent on soliciting community input and feedback, listening and considering all of the insights and recommendations of the aforementioned groups, Governor Christie will meet with each of the final candidates prior to the Education Commissioner’s final selection being made in May, ensuring that the new superintendent is in place by the end of the school year.

 

Posted: March 17th, 2011 | Author: | Filed under: Chris Christie, Education, Newark | Tags: , , , | 1 Comment »

Christie’s Attorney General’s Office Picking Up Where Christie’s U.S. Attorney’s Office Left Off

By Art Gallagher

U.S. Attorney Paul Fishman may not think there is a culture of public corruption in New Jersey, but that doesn’t mean that The Soprano State is no longer plagued with graft.

As Gannett’s Bob Jordan points out, New Jersey Attorney General Paula Dowd, who works for Governor Chris Christie and used to work for U.S. Attorney Chris Christie, is continuing the work that was started during Christie’s seven years as New Jersey’s federal prosecutor.

Jordan is referencing the Attorney General’s Annual Report which touts the accomplishments of Dowd’s team against public corruption, gang activity, fraud, and organized crime.

According to a press release from Dowd’s office, their first year accomplishments include:

  • Obtained an eight-year prison sentence against former State Assemblyman and former Perth Amboy Mayor Vas, who solicited an illegal payment from a city vendor and illegally funneled money into his congressional campaign via straw donors; a seven-year sentence against former Irvington Mayor Steele, who took kickbacks from contractors while serving as business administrator for the Irvington schools; a three-year prison term against former Jersey City Municipal Court Administrator Virginia Pagan, who admitted to fixing hundreds of parking tickets; the forfeiture of office of former Assemblyman Anthony Chiappone, who admitted to filing false reports with the Election Law Enforcement Commission.
  • Obtained a five-year prison sentence against former Assemblyman Neil Cohen, who admitted to viewing and printing child pornography on a computer in his legislative office.
  • Secured convictions and prison sentences against individuals responsible for more than $16 million in fraud including investment fraud, embezzlement and identity theft.
  • Took legal action to protect students by holding schools accountable for preventing bullying. Among other actions, Findings of Probable Cause were issued against two school districts – Old Bridge and Emerson — accused of failing to protect students who had been bullied and harassed for years.
  • Resolved three major civil prosecutions of mortgage foreclosure “rescue” fraud, resulting in defendant payments of $17 million in penalties, judgments, restitution and other fees.
  • · Fought traditional organized crime, obtaining a major indictment charging the Lucchese crime family hierarchy with running an illegal sports betting network that employed violence and extortion and, in a separate case, joining with the Waterfront Commission of New York Harbor to arrest a top official of the International Longshoremen’s Association, three ILA members, and a Newark police officer in an alleged scheme to extort money from dock workers.
  • Obtained indictments charging nine defendants in connection with illegal gun trafficking. The indictments were obtained as the result of a cooperative investigation with the U.S. Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives. One indictment outlined a network that allegedly trafficked firearms from the Eastern Shore of Virginia to Trenton, where they were allegedly sold to gang members and other criminals.
  • Spearheaded the Fugitive Safe Surrender program in Central New Jersey. The four-day initiative resulted in approximately 4,000 fugitives surrendering, voluntarily, to authorities on outstanding warrants for predominantly non-violent crimes.
  • Achieved a 170 percent increase, compared with the prior year, in the amount of civil monetary penalties executed by the Office of the Insurance Fraud Prosecutor. OIFP also increased both the number of indictments filed and the number of defendants charged in 2010.
  • Implemented a statewide Summer Warrant SWEEP initiative resulting in the arrests of more than 1,100 high-risk parole and probation absconders during the months of July and August, when violent and property crimes tend to peak.
  • Protected investors by settling four Auction Rate Securities cases. The four companies repurchased $1.1 billion in Auction Rate Securities held by New Jersey investors and paid the N.J. Bureau of Securities $7.2 million in penalties for failing to disclose the risks of Auction Rate Securities to investors.
  • Provided emergency assistance to thousands of residents and motorists during four federally-declared natural disasters. During the December 2010 blizzard, State Police handled 1,077 accidents and provided emergency assistance to an additional 2,889 motorists.
Posted: March 9th, 2011 | Author: | Filed under: Chris Christie, Paula Dowd | Tags: , | Comments Off on Christie’s Attorney General’s Office Picking Up Where Christie’s U.S. Attorney’s Office Left Off

Who’s hotter? Christie or Palin?

InTheLobby reminds of that the war of words between Governor Chris Christie and former Alaska Governor Sarah Palin is heating up as neither of them runs from president.

Meanwhile, Quinnipiac released a poll this morning that says voters rate Christie as much hotter than Palin.

Hmmm.

Posted: March 8th, 2011 | Author: | Filed under: Chris Christie, Sarah Palin | Tags: , | 1 Comment »

Christie Super Hero Video From Taiwan

Hat tip to Capital Quickies

Posted: March 3rd, 2011 | Author: | Filed under: Chris Christie | Tags: | 1 Comment »

Correction? Did Christie say he “will not” or “may not” be governor in 2014?

By Art Gallagher

The Record’s Herb Jackson might have misquoted Governor Chris Christie when he reported that the governor said, I’m not going to even be governor in 2014″.

As brought to our attention by our friends at InTheLobby, others have reported that Christie said, “Candidly, I may not even be governor in 2014.”

That’s a bit different.

CBS News has a tape of the interview.    Christie utters the phrase very quickly at the 20 second mark of the tape, immediately after an edit.

Frankly, I’m not sure which version is correct.

Posted: March 2nd, 2011 | Author: | Filed under: Chris Christie | Tags: | Comments Off on Correction? Did Christie say he “will not” or “may not” be governor in 2014?

Will Christie’s Reforms Reduce Property Taxes?

By Art Gallagher

In a column published in The Star Ledger and at NJ Spotlight, Mark Magyar says no.  Magyar says that like all the governors before him, except Florio, Christie is simply tinkering at the margins and that whether Christie serves one term or two, New Jersey’s property taxes will still be the highest in the nation.

Magyar, who was a policy advisor to Chris Daggett’s Independent gubernatorial campaign against Christie and Jon Corzine, makes the case that unless New Jersey increases income taxes and sales taxes with the State taking over a higher burden of education funding, that property taxes will continue to be a dispropotionate and inequitable source of funding for education and government services.

A good tax system is generally considered to be one in which income, property and sales taxes are in some rough balance, with each providing somewhere between 30 percent and 40 percent of total revenue for these three major taxes. That is the case in most states, but it is not the case in New Jersey, where property taxes actually make up 58 percent of the income/property/sales tax pie, with income taxes accounting for just 24 percent and sales for the remaining 18 percent.

The only way to actually lower property taxes in New Jersey to a competitive level with other states is to shift billions of dollars of the cost of K-12 education or municipal or county services to another major tax or taxes — with the income and sales taxes being the most logical choices — while simultaneously making sure that an effective cap prevents any new increase in school district and local government spending.

That is what Democratic Gov. Jim Florio tried to do in 1990 when he dedicated half of his $2.8 billion tax package to property tax relief, but most of the money was quickly eaten up by school districts and municipalities for new spending, and by the second year property taxes were rising again as rapidly as ever. Voter repudiation of Florio led to the election of a Republican legislature and GOP Gov. Christie Whitman, and scared politicians in both parties away from any meaningful attempt at overall tax reform.

Magyar makes a compelling case.  Middletown Committeeman Gerry Scharfenberger made a similar case last August.

However, Magyar’s argument is a non-sequitur to the current debate happening in Trenton (and nationally).

Even if Christie and the legislature were to institute Steve Lonegan’s flat tax, increasing income taxes on the poor and middle class while reducing them on the rich, and even if they instituted Chris Daggett’s $4 billion sales tax increase, and used the new revenue to reduce property taxes, the problems that Christie is addressing would remain.  They would just be paid for differently.

New Jersey, and many other states, has too much government.  There are too many government employees making too much money and getting benefits that are too generous to sustain regardless of how the revenue is generated.

It is only by reducing the size of government on all levels, which means less government employees making less money with less generous pensions and benefits, that our overall tax burden will decrease.  That is what Christie’s reforms are designed to do.   By forcing the downsizing within the current system, rather than radically changing the way New Jersey taxes its citizens and then implementing cuts, Christie is demanding that municipal, county governments and school boards make the hard choices now.  If Christie did it Magyar’s way, government and taxes would continue to expand.

Let’s first reduce the size of our governments.  Once that is done we can address the way we pay for them.

Posted: March 1st, 2011 | Author: | Filed under: Chris Christie, Property Taxes | Tags: , , | 13 Comments »

Christie: “I won’t be governor in 2014”

By Art Gallagher

While criticising President Obama’s comments to the nation’s governors about public employee unions and health care, Governor Chris Christie told reporters that he will not be governor in 2014, according to Herb Jackson of The Record.

“I’m not going to even be governor in 2014, so the fact that he’s offering flexibility in 2014 is really of no moment to most governors who need to balance their budgets this year,” Christie said.

If reelected in 2013, Christie would be sworn in to his secord term in January 2014.

At his Town Hall meeting in Middletown on January 26th, Christie said he was going to seek a second term as governor.

The governor has repeatedly declared that he is not running for president in 2012.

Maybe his plans are changing.

Posted: March 1st, 2011 | Author: | Filed under: 2012 Presidential Politics, Chris Christie | Tags: | 5 Comments »

Governor Christie Moves Horse Racing Closer to a Self-Sustaining Model with Legislation to Expedite Off Track Wagering

Requests for Proposals To Be Issued Next Week for Monmouth Park 

Trenton, NJ – Governor Chris Christie today moved forward with his commitment to making horse racing in New Jersey a self-sustaining industry by signing legislation to expedite the establishment of off-track wagering facilities in New Jersey. Another step forward comes early next week, when the New Jersey Sports and Exposition Authority will issue a request for proposals to bring a long-term solution to Monmouth Park through private operation. 

On December 17, 2010, Governor Christie announced a break-through agreement to end public subsidies of operations and purses for Standardbred racing at the Meadowlands Racetrack through the lease of that facility to the Standardbred Breeders and Owners Association (SBOA). Governor Christie is looking forward to similar progress with Monmouth Park and Thoroughbred racing there with the RFP for a private operator. 

“We were successful in the Meadowlands, and we can do the same for Monmouth Park to the benefit of New Jersey taxpayers,” Governor Christie said.  “I want to see a vibrant but self-sustaining horse racing industry in New Jersey, but that can be accomplished without tens of millions of dollars in taxpayer subsidies every year.” 

Assembly Bill 1705, which Governor Christie conditionally vetoed on January 31 and the Legislature subsequently amended to include the Governor’s recommended changes, removes barriers to the establishment of OTWs by permitting persons other than racetrack operators to run OTW facilities, making OTWs a permitted use in all municipal land use zones, and increasing the accessibility to liquor licenses for OTW operators. 

Despite enactment of an original OTW law nearly a decade ago, only three of the 15 facilities allowed by law were established. Governor Christie’s conditional veto was necessary to preserve the NJSEA’s ability to transfer licenses in connection with the sale or lease of the state’s racetracks.  It also eliminated a 1 percent fee on OTW operators, but expressly noted that the Administration will work with the Legislature to find an alternative source of revenue for OTW host municipalities

 

Posted: February 25th, 2011 | Author: | Filed under: Chris Christie, Horse Racing Industry, Monmouth Park | Tags: , , , | Comments Off on Governor Christie Moves Horse Racing Closer to a Self-Sustaining Model with Legislation to Expedite Off Track Wagering

How Chris Christie Did His Homework

Matt Bai’s article on Governor Chris Chrisite in the NY Times Magazine is a MUST READ.

Posted: February 24th, 2011 | Author: | Filed under: Chris Christie | Tags: | 1 Comment »

The Public Employee Union Problem

By Art Gallagher

Yesterday in Government of the unions, by the unions and for the unions I said that “public employee unions are as serious a threat to Americans’ freedom as is radical Islam. Maybe more so. ”   That wasn’t hyperbole.

President Franklin D. Roosevelt and George Meany, the first president of the AFL-CIO, warned of the dangers of public employee collective bargaining.  From Daniel DiSalvo’s The Trouble with Public Sector Unions:

The emergence of powerful public-sector unions was by no means inevitable. Prior to the 1950s, as labor lawyer Ida Klaus remarked in 1965, “the subject of labor relations in public employment could not have meant less to more people, both in and out of government.” To the extent that people thought about it, most politicians, labor leaders, economists, and judges opposed collective bargaining in the public sector. Even President Franklin Roosevelt, a friend of private-sector unionism, drew a line when it came to government workers: “Meticulous attention,” the president insisted in 1937, “should be paid to the special relations and obligations of public servants to the public itself and to the Government….The process of collective bargaining, as usually understood, cannot be transplanted into the public service.” The reason? F.D.R. believed that “[a] strike of public employees manifests nothing less than an intent on their part to obstruct the operations of government until their demands are satisfied. Such action looking toward the paralysis of government by those who have sworn to support it is unthinkable and intolerable.” Roosevelt was hardly alone in holding these views, even among the champions of organized labor. Indeed, the first president of the AFL-CIO, George Meany, believed it was “impossible to bargain collectively with the government.”

In New Jersey, the unions run our governments on the state, county and municipal levels.  Fortunately, Governor Chris Christie is fighting to correct some of the economic imbalances the unions have imposed upon the people with the cooperation of their lap dogs…previous governors and legislatures that the unions elected and shared the largess with.   Yet Christie is fighting to only tame the beast while killing the beast is appropriate. 

Examples of unions dictating government policy, spending and even risking public safety are so prevalent that we don’t even notice.  The unions tyranny is so complete that we just surrender rather than fight.

A minor example is Christie choosing not to layoff government workers during the current budget cycle.  Governor Corzine signed a no layoff contract with the unions just prior to his reelection campaign kickoff.   Vice President Joe Biden told Corzine that he wouldn’t cross a union picket line to appear at Corzine’s event.  Corzine caved to the unions demands and signed a deal that tied his successor’s hands. 

Much more serious examples come from our cities of Newark and Camden.   Both cities are in serious fiscal trouble.  Both cities, already high crime areas, are experiencing increases in violent crime.   In both cities unions forced police layoffs.  The most senior and highest paid members of the police department got to keep their jobs while younger junior officers were let go.  The younger officers are being recruited to join police departments in other states for less pay.  The unions didn’t even give them the option of accepting less pay to keep working at home.  Our leaders, the governor and the cities mayors accepted this situation because they had no choice.

The police situation in Newark and Camden is insane.  It is not government of the people, by the people and for the people.  It is government of the unions, by the unions and for the unions.

Unions, and their lap dog lawmakers have designed a system that trumps the economic law of supply and demand.  There is a huge supply of labor available.  Millions of those people are getting by with checks from the government.  The government can’t put these people to work, as police officers or in other functions, because of union rules and contracts.  This situation is insane.  We are living it.

This is not a system that protects the middle class, as the unions are protesting.  This is a system that rewards the few at the expense of, and literally to the detriment to the safety of us, the many.

Is there any doubt that Newark Mayor Cory Booker and Camden Mayor Dana Reed would hire as many police officers as they could and pay them the wages they could afford if “the system” allowed them to?  Is there any doubt that those jobs would be filled and that there would be a waiting list to fill vacancies?  I think not.

Newark and Camden are extreme but real examples of unions controlling our government and public safety.  There are less extreme but just as real examples all over New Jersey.   Our elected leaders throughout the state on all levels of government are constrained primarily by union contracts and civil service rules in their efforts to reform their jurisdictions and deliver government services efficiently.

It is insanity and we are living it.  It is tyranny and we are subject to it.

Posted: February 22nd, 2011 | Author: | Filed under: Chris Christie, Public Employee Unions | Tags: , | 5 Comments »