Trenton Rally News 12 NJ

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Uploaded by on Mar 4, 2011

NJ police, firefighters rally at Statehouse

By Angela Delli Santi

Associated Press
Published: Thursday, March 3, 2011 2:25 p.m. MST

TRENTON, N.J. — As many as 12,000 off-duty and retired New Jersey police and firefighters crowded outside the state Capitol in bone-chilling cold Thursday to promote public safety and protest staff cuts they say have thinned their ranks to unsafe levels.

Public safety workers also object to proposals by Republican Gov. Chris Christie and Democratic Senate President Stephen Sweeney to make them work longer before retiring and significantly raise their contributions for health benefits. The crowd chanted for Sweeney, a Democrat, throughout the rally.

"Traditionally, police officers and firefighters do not rally," said Bill Lavin, an Elizabeth firefighter and president of the Firemen's Mutual Benevolent Association, representing 5,500 full-time firefighters. "This today is an emergency response."

Lavin said attendance at the rally swelled because public safety workers are tired of hearing rhetoric from the governor that devalues their profession and tries to separate them from other taxpayers.

Christie, who scheduled a news conference inside the Statehouse for the same time as the rally, called the demonstration a selfish act and said it would have "an absolutely zero" effect on his decisions.

This is a "me-first rally," Christie said. "Pay me first. Give me my pension first. Give me my health benefits first. Give me my high salary first."

"They can have their fun today, that's fine. It doesn't change the numbers," Christie said.

The pension fund for police and firefighters, teachers, state, county and local government workers and judges is underfunded by $54 billion. The health care system for workers and retirees is underfunded by $67 billion. Christie says both systems will go belly-up without changes and argues that to save them, he is seeking a greater contribution from workers.

"Public employees are being portrayed by (the Christie administration) as the bad guys, the people at fault here, but that's not correct," said Sgt. William Nunn, a corrections officer who was at the rally. "If the state had properly funded the pension system over the years instead of taking money out, there wouldn't be a crisis. We call on them to put back the money they took out, to fulfill the promises they made to us."

Police Benevolent Association spokesman Jim Ryan says 3,200 fewer officers are on the streets than a year ago because of layoffs and positions left unfilled. Cities like Camden and Newark have laid off significant numbers of officers to balance their budgets.

Ryan said crime is up for the first time in four years statewide, and more public safety workers are filing for retirement to beat changes that would make pension and health benefits less generous. The stage was flanked with pairs of empty firefighters boots to symbolize the number of unfilled positions.

Jerry DeCicco, president of the Jersey City Police Officers Benevolent Association, was among several speakers who said they felt betrayed by the governor. As a candidate, Christie promised not to tinker with public safety workers' pensions while as governor he has proposed major changes, said DeCicco, who was on Christie's transition team.

"We're here to send a message to the people in this building — don't screw with us," said DeCicco.

Christie said he would prefer to negotiate statewide contracts for police, firefighter and teachers rather than town-by-town agreements that are bargained now.

The rally was the second Statehouse demonstration in a week by government workers. The AFL-CIO sponsored a unity rally Friday for Wisconsin public employees who are fighting a move to end their collective bargaining rights.

Democrats in the Legislature lined up to speak at Thursday's event.

Senate Democratic Leader Barbara Buono recalled the legions of police and firefighters who rushed into burning World Trade Center buildings on Sept. 11, 2001.

"You are our finest and our most selfless public workers," she told the crowd. She and more than a dozen Democrats in the Senate and Assembly pledged their support to the crowd.

Public safety workers began setting up for their rally before dawn. The state Police Benevolent Association had 110 buses.

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  • they need to start contributing? the fire and police pay 8% into their pensions, soon to be 10%, the teachers pay 3%. I think the police and fire pay enough into their pension

  • Hey, I have an idea, why don't you just jack up my taxes to pay for your cushy jobs and benefits.

  • what a bunch of leeches

  • Sorry, they need to start contributing to their benefits. As a taxpayer, I am sick of their crybaby actions.

    The truth is the local budgets are being squeezed.

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