Dear Friends (I think)
I have had a major catastrophe! Both of the hard drives in my computer failed simultaneously and I have lost all data. I have bought a new computer but I don't have the email addresses for the people to whom I send my blog notifications.
If you would send to me your email address and that of any other people who you think might be interested in this blog I will appreciate it.
My email is wsautter@optonline.net
Thanks
Walt
PS
I just saw in the paper that Judge Hurd refused to reinstate the pension COLA! Maybe I should have spelled his name with a "T".
PSS
I have also noted that judges in NJ did not have their pensions effected by the new pension laws? Very curious isn't it??
Responding to the ridicule of teachers and the teaching profession by politicians and self proclaimed "experts"!
"Where is Albert Shanker now that we need him?" - Walt Sautter
Wednesday, 30 May 2012
Friday, 18 May 2012
Monday, 14 May 2012
If This Doesn't Piss You Off - Check Your Pulse - You Must Be Dead!
"Hey - This pension reform thing is working great - For my buds!" |
N.J. Gov. Chris Christie with Lt. Gov. Kim Guadagno in November 2011. Despite Guadagno's involvement in a criminal investigation of pension abuse, Christie has not appointed a special prosecutor.
By Mark Lagerkvist
New Jersey Watchdog
But his reform did little to stop the age-old New Jersey practice of double-dipping, in which employees "retire," start collecting a pension, and then are rehired, often the next day. Christie's own deputy chief of staff collects $219,000 a year from the state — a $130,000 salary as a top aide to the governor plus $89,000 in state pension.
Worse for Christie, a criminal investigation is under way involving his running mate, New Jersey Lt. Gov. Kim Guadagno.
As a county sheriff in 2008, Guadagno made false statements to enable her chief officer to pocket nearly $85,000 a year in retirement pay while drawing an $87,500 annual salary. The double-dipping scheme first was reported by New Jersey Watchdog in 2010.
The state's investigation is assigned to the Attorney's General's Division of Criminal Justice, a unit where Guadagno once served as deputy director. Despite the apparent conflict, Christie has not appointed a special prosecutor.
A spokesman for Christie and Guadagno declined to comment. The Attorney General's Office did not respond to questions.
Pension abuses are so rampant in New Jersey that even the agency investigating Guadagno has its own controversy.
Twenty-three supervisors and investigators for the Attorney General’s Office and DCJ are using legal loopholes to draw salaries and pension pay, New Jersey Watchdog found. On average, each pockets $164,000 a year — $96,000 in salary and $68,000 in pension.
Most "retired" for just one night. Those officers left their positions with the Attorney General’s Office only to return to the same employer the next morning with new job titles — and two paychecks instead of one.
In a continuing series of investigative reports, New Jersey Watchdog exposed similar double-dipping practices involving 125 officers employed by prosecutors, 18 officials from a state Homeland Security Unit and 44 county sheriffs and undersheriffs — in addition to the Guadagno story.
Democratic State Sen. Fred Madden is a "triple-dipper" who collects more than $241,000 a year from public coffers — $49,000 as a legislator, $106,983 as a police academy dean and an $85,272 pension as a State Police retiree.
"I don't have a problem with it at all," said Madden.
The Guadagno controversy -
While Madden and others profit from loopholes in pension rules, the circumstances surrounding Christie's second-in-command raise questions of fraud and deception.
Guadagno was elected sheriff of Monmouth County in 2007. She previously worked as an assistant U.S. attorney and as an assistant New Jersey attorney general. From 1998 to 2001, Guadagno served as deputy director of the DCJ — the unit now assigned to investigate the case in which she's a major figure.
In 2008, Guadagno hired Michael Donovan Jr., a retired investigator for the county prosecutor, as the sheriff’s “chief of law enforcement division.” She announced the appointment in a memo to her staff.
The focus of a criminal investigation of pension abuse, Chief Michael Donovan takes an oath of office in the Monmouth County, N.J., Sheriff's Office on Sept. 22, 2008. Donovan's job title was fudged to allow him to collect his pension and his pay at the same time. The swearing in was witnessed by his mother, Emily, and then-Sheriff Kim Guadagno, now the state's lieutenant governor. Donovan was sworn in by Judge Lawrence M. Lawson.
But there was a problem. As a sheriff's chief officer — a position covered by the pension system — Donovan would be required to stop receiving pension checks and resume contributions to the state retirement fund.
Guadagno fudged the job title, so Donovan could double-dip. In county payroll records, the oath of office and a news release, Donovan was called the sheriff's "chief warrant officer" — a low-ranking position exempt from the pension system.
A chief warrant officer oversees the service of warrants and other legal documents. In contrast, the sheriff's official website identified Donovan as "sheriff's officer chief," supervising 115 subordinate officers and 30 civilian employees.
On Guadagno’s organizational chart, Donovan was listed as chief of law enforcement — and the position of chief warrant officer was conspicuously absent.
The ruse allowed Donovan to collect an $87,500 salary from Monmouth County in addition to an $85,000 pension as a retired county employee.
A Conflicted Investigation - When Guadagno was elected as Christie's running mate in the 2009 election, she resigned as sheriff.
In 2010, state Treasury pension officials began to ask Monmouth County about retiree Donovan's employment. "I would respectfully request that former Sheriff Guadagno be contacted..." replied her successor, Shaun Golden, in a letter forwarded to the Treasury.
The Treasury denied the existence of any correspondence or email contact with Guadagno or Christie regarding Donovan. Officials also rejected requests for records of the Treasury's inquiry.
In response, New Jersey Watchdog filed a formal complaint with the state Government Records Council, a body consisting of gubernatorial appointees and cabinet officials. One year later, the council has yet to render an advisory opinion.
Meanwhile, the state Police and Firemen's Retirement System's Board of Trustees took action of its own.
"It's a double-whammy," said PFRS chairman John Sierchio. "If you're going to retire under one job title and come back under another title, we have a problem with that. The chief of sheriff is a covered title under the pension system — and they should be contributing instead of drawing out."
The PFRS board voted in May 2011 to call for a criminal investigation of Donovan and parallel instances involving John Dough, of Essex County, and Harold Gibson, of Union County. The case was referred to DCJ.
However, the investigation is riddled with a maze of potential conflicts of interest:
•DCJ is probing allegations involving its own former deputy director, Guadagno.
•Nearly two dozen DCJ investigators and supervisors are "double-dippers" who collect state paychecks and pensions.
•Attorney General Jeffrey Chiesa, a Christie appointee, is ultimately in charge of the probe of fellow cabinet member Guadagno. Chiesa is also former chief counsel to Christie.
•Despite evidence of possible wrongdoing by his lieutenant governor, Christie has not appointed a special prosecutor or authorized an independent investigation.
One year later, the PFRS board remains in the dark. "I keep asking, but we haven't been told anything," said Sierchio.
Lt. Gov. Kim Guadagno of New Jersey. When she was a county sheriff, her office fudged a job description and organizational charts to allow an aide to double-dip on his pension. Guadagno has declined to comment.
Sean Conner, a spokesman for Christie and Guadagno, refused to listen to questions about Guadagno's role or the need for a special prosecutor.
"Let me stop you right there," Conner told New Jersey Watchdog. "If it was referred to DCJ, you need to call DCJ."
The Attorney General's Office did not respond to questions about the investigation.
Back in Monmouth County, Donovan has another new job title — but he’s still a double-dipper. In February 2011, Golden named him undersheriff in charge of law enforcement — a strikingly similar position, but one apparently exempt in the labyrinth of pension rules. Donovan currently gets an $86,000 annual pension on top of his $92,000 salary.
While sheriff's chief, Donovan pocketed $227,000 in retirement checks. Since he did not re-enroll in the pension system, he avoided $18,000 in contributions to the retirement fund. If state authorities ultimately determine Donovan violated pension rules, he could be forced to repay $245,000.
Reform...except for double-dipping - Pension fraud and widespread abuse are nothing new in New Jersey.
The federal Securities and Exchange Commission accused New Jersey of pension fraud in 2010. It was the first time the SEC had taken action against a state government over public pension funds.
According to the SEC, New Jersey misled its bond investors from 2001 to 2007 by failing to disclose it had not met its obligation to fund public workers' pension funds. The lawsuit was settled with a cease-and-desist order, which the state accepted without admitting or denying the charges. The alleged fraud occurred on the watch of four previous governors.
Christie vowed to overhaul the pension system. With the state facing a $45 billion pension shortfall when he took office, the new governor spearheaded legislation that he signed into law last year.
"We are putting the people first and daring to touch the third rail of politics to bring reform to unsustainable system," stated Christie in a news release. “We are once again showing the people of New Jersey that our state is leading the way on the biggest challenges before us and remains unafraid to do what is hard, but necessary."
But the reforms did little to halt widespread double-dipping by numerous public employees, including Christie's deputy chief of staff.
Louis Goetting gets $219,000 a year from the state — $130,000 in salary as a top aide to the governor plus $89,000 in state pension payments from an early retirement deal. Christie hired Goetting in 2010 as a budget guru to help trim the cost of government.
In addition, Goetting (pronounced “getting”) received two golden parachutes from public coffers before joining Christie — severance packages of $190,000 from Brookdale Community College in 2009 and $180,000 from University of Medicine and Dentistry of New Jersey in 2002.
Gov. Chris Christie of New Jersey has touted his pension reforms, which have done little to halt the practice of double-dipping by public employees, including his deputy chief of staff.
The bottom line: Goetting has gotten more than $1.1 million in pension and severance pay — and he still draws a six-figure salary from the state.
In answer to questions about Goetting's double-dips, the governor's press office has reiterated a statement Christie issued last year: "There is no one in my administration, myself included, who understands about the operation of this government better than Lou Goetting does. And so the people of New Jersey have gotten an incredible bargain.”
Pension reforms will not be complete without an investigative staff to monitor potential abuses, according to PFRS chairman Sierchio. He noted there are 275,000 retirees — but no investigators assigned to review complaints.
"We don't have anybody watching the store," said Sierchio. "We've got an $80 billion pension system, and nobody to investigate anything. Once you get your pension, you never have to look over your shoulder.
Wednesday, 9 May 2012
Why Not Whys Instead of Hows?
All the recent clamor about
student loan rates got me to thinking about my own college days.
I graduated from a rural,
north western, New Jersey high school in 1960.
My family lived on the edge. My father was in his seventies
and disabled. We lived solely on his monthly Social Security check (I know –
“socialism, entitlements, feeding at the public trough, etc.”) but without it
we wouldn’t have survived.
Upon graduation I sought a
college with the lowest possible tuition. The one I found was East Carolina
College in Greenville, North Carolina however even that was more than I could
afford when I considered the costs of transportation.
As a result, I
joined the work force delivering coal for the local lumberyard.
After a year of hard
labor I accumulated two years of tuition money and was admitted to Montclair
State College.
Enough about
me.
What does this
have to do will the current banter regarding student loan rates?
Well, I
clearly recall the tuition rate that I paid in 1961was - are you ready?
One hundred and
fifty dollars per year!
If it weren’t for that minimal tuition rate, I and many like
me, could have never moved from the poverty class to the middle class. I’d
still be shoveling coal for a living!
As you can see below, the rate for the same college today is
approaching ten thousand dollars per year!
Now I know what many of
you will say.
“Yes, but everything was cheaper then and a dollar was worth
much more than today.”
All this is true but let’s use some simple arithmetic to
give these numbers current day prospective so they can be fully appreciated.
First, consider that tuition rates have increased 6400% over
the past forty-five years ($150 to $9674).
My first teaching job in 1965 paid a starting salary of
$5200. Today a starting salary hovers around $50,000 a less than 690% increase.
In 1966 I bought my first new car, a fully loaded Pontiac
Lemans (one of the most popular and stylish cars of the day). The cost - $2750!
A similar car today (a Honda Accord) goes for approximately
$23,000, an 840% increase.
Gasoline prices (another topic of popular controversy) were
at $.33 per gallon. Today - $4.00 per gallon – a 1200% increase.
Even housing has risen at a significantly lesser rate than
college tuition. In 1965 a new single family, split level sold for about
$25,000. Today that same house bears a price tag of about $450,000 – an
increase of a mere 1800%.
The education “reform” movement in New Jersey and elsewhere
throughout the nation proclaims that vouchers and privatization will lower
costs.
All colleges, both public and private participate in the
“free market” in that they are obliged to compete for students (customers).
Based on the aforementioned
statistics it certainly appears that the “free market” when applied to
education does not reduce costs. When compared to the price rises of other
“commodities” it may be actually increasing costs to the consumer?
It appears that college tuition rates have “gone wild”.
How does this relate to public education?
Why have no questions been asked as to why college costs have skyrocketed beyond all other costs? Only questions about
interest rates on the loans that are required in order to pay them have been
raised!
The same vein of discussion occurs pertaining to health care
costs. Again, little asked as to why costs are so high but instead how and who
is going to pay them!
The whys of the
costs of both of these vital services are never called into question?
Interestingly enough however, when it comes to costs of
public education and public services which have risen not near so dramatically,
the conversation immediately changes from “How do we pay for it?” to “Let’s
limit costs by reducing salaries and benefits and putting caps on budgets”.
Why is this approach to solving cost problems applied only
to public services and public servants and never to purveyors the services that
engage in the most egregious price rises of all?
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