Politics & Government

Christie: State Is On the Upswing

Governor's town hall message emphasizes reforms to spending, taxation, education and pensions

New Jersey is beginning to turn a corner.

Gov. Chris Christie opened his 19th town hall of 2011 in Toms River today with a half-hour speech that began with that sentiment, as he outlined a familiar "reform agenda" that emphasized the steps he felt were necessary to repair an underfunded pension system, troubled education results and taxpayers' property tax burden.

"New Jersey is beginning to turn a corner. I can feel it, hope you can feel it too. In 2009, when I was elected, we were going through some of the toughest times we had seen in this state," Christie said.

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He said those tough times were a result of a poor economy, but also poor decisions.

There was a 322 percent increase in state spending from 1990 to 2010, Christie said. "That's the equivalent of spending 16 percent more a  year, every year," he said. "No family would do that, increasing their spending 16 percent ever year. No family can survive that."

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Seniors, new families and businesses were fleeing New Jersey for places they can afford to live, Christie said. "It's not right," he said. "They don't have to leave a state they were born and raised in to be able to afford a house."

Compare that to June 2011. Christie said job growth has improved over the last few months."Instead of a downturn, we are on the upswing," he said. " We cannot change course now."

Supportive Audience

Strong applause followed most of the governor's comments and answers to audience questions. The crowd was diverse in the questions it brought, hoping the governor would address the Atlantic City tourism district, teacher performance, veterans services for South Jersey and the tax burden for individuals and businesses.

He was speaking to an audience of mostly middle-aged and older adults wearing  suits, tank tops, National Guard fatigues or veterans insignias. The governor was not faced with the opposition that turned out for earlier town halls. Protesters were absent outside the facility as doors opened at 2 p.m. through the end of the program, around 5 p.m.

One audience member brought hand-made signs supporting Christie, while others' intentions were known by the political bumper stickers of vehicles that packed the neighboring Winding River Ice Skating Rink.

The town hall, held at Toms River's armory, saw more than 250 attendees to the standing-room only event, listening politely and with supportive claps to standing ovations for tax reforms that Christie outlined before taking questions from the audience.

The agenda: cut spending, provide tax relief, provide stability for New Jersey's businesses and economy and reward excellent teachers and fire ineffective ones.

The governor called a 2 percent cap on increasing tax levies a success. The measure forced local government and school boards to present budgets increasing by 2 percent or less.

"We can say in towns across New Jersey taxes went up less than 2 percent," he said to strong applause.

Christie pointed to Democratic legislators and the state teachers' union as opponents to the reform agenda.

He said that recent New Jersey Education Association television ads have nothing to do with education and instead were a product of hate.

"They are hoping you'll hate me, and the discussion on education will just go away," he said.

Christie's continued battle with Democratic legislators was brought up early in his speech, as the governor referenced a Star-Ledger report that Democrats were beginning to consider raising taxes."I didn't fight for the  last 17 months to have lower taxes to give in now," he said.

'We Agree With Him'

In the audience: Toms River Township Councilman Gregory McGuckin, who is also running for state Assembly. Republican McGuckin said Christie came to an overwhelmingly supportive area.

"Christie won Toms River by 12,000 votes, he won Ocean County by 70,000 votes," McGuckin said. "The people in Ocean County, in Toms River, we agree with him."

McGuckin said he supported many of the governor's reforms. "He's proposing solutions. You don't hear too many people doing that."

However, in a news release distributed after the town hall, Bette Wary, 10th District Democratic candidate for state Assembly, said the governor shows "continuing inconsistency concerning public officials who take advantage of a pension loophole that permits elected officials to collect a pension while continuing to draw a paycheck from the same job."

She said she was disappointed Christie had yet to address local Republicans she said are taking advantage of the loophole, namely, Ocean County Freeholder Joseph Vicari and 10th District Republican Assemblyman James Holzapfel. Wary said the governor managed to scold Democratic Essex County  Executive Joe DiVincenzo and north Jersey Sen. Loretta Weinberg for collecting both a salary as well as a pension based on the same job.

“What we are seeing here is clear partisan politics,” said Wary. “The governor is attacking Democrats for using this loophole, but giving the Ocean County Republicans a pass for doing the same thing."

Former Toms River Mayor Paul Brush hoped the governor would address the creation of quasi-government authorities for such things as municipal utilities or parking authorities, who operate by appointments and govern their own budgets without much public input.

Brush, who is running as a Democrat for Toms River mayor this year, agreed the audience was a very friendly one to Christie.

"There was nobody really challenging him," Brush said.

Christie ended the town hall with an explanation of what he said was often a brash delivery of his opinions.

 "People say I'm angry, but it's not that. I feel I am the luckiest man alive, to be the governor of the state I grew up in," he said.

He told a story of how his ailing mother told him there was nothing left unsaid between them."That's made me who I am," he said.


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