Thursday, March 3, 2011

Bateman: Approve NJ Civil Service Reform Now

In response to today's rally by police and firefighters outside the New Jersey State House in Trenton, Senator Christopher "Kip" Bateman (R-Somerset/Morris) renewed his push for civil service reforms that will produce the savings needed to keep those vital public servants at their jobs.
"Today's rally should be a wake-up call to Democrats to stop stonewalling and pass comprehensive civil service reform," stated Bateman. "In these tough economic times, towns and cities throughout New Jersey are struggling with the inflexibility of the current civil service bureaucracy that makes it impossible to cut costs and balance budgets without laying off employees, including police and firefighters. Civil Service reform is not a cure-all, but it certainly would help towns lower their costs and allow many of these men and women to continue serving their communities."
Bateman noted that the civil service system was instituted early in the last century as a way to prevent politicians from packing government offices with incompetent friends and allies, or from firing good public servants without cause. This happened before modern labor and discrimination laws were passed, or before public workers formed unions.
"The civil service system was an important form of protection for public workers before modern labor laws were enacted, but now it's just another redundant layer of bureaucracy that hurts both public employees and taxpayers," Bateman continued. "Local government officials have little control over their workforces and lack the flexibility to manage their personnel in a way that cuts costs and protects jobs."
Senator Bateman is the sponsor of comprehensive civil service reform legislation (S-2039) that would allow local governments to opt out of the civil service system entirely and give town and county officials more power to reduce personnel costs and streamline operations. This bill is part of the Governor’s “toolkit” of bills designed to assist municipalities, counties and State agencies in managing their budgets.
"The Democrat majority passed a watered down version of civil service reform, but it was correctly rejected by the Governor for being ineffective and meaningless," concluded Bateman. "New Jersey taxpayers, and the thousands of police and firemen who serve them, deserve real change and real civil service reform now."

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