Home

Friday, December 3, 2010

Same Old Cuts, Why Not Get Rid of Half the Bureaucrats? That would go unnoticed! Camden City Council Approves Massive Police And Fire Layoffs

Formerly the First Most Dangerous City (relinquished to St. Louis), some blocks in Camden look like photos taken in 1945 of the streets in Berlin. Berlin may have been safer. At least then you had the prospect of defending yourself. Now the usual ploy of removing protective services first in order to get higher taxes or State funds by fear and sympathy for their wasteful City management.
The City population declines every year, the manufacturing is gone, the State built monuments like the Aquarium for tourist who are afraid to visit.
Three Camden mayors have been jailed for corruption, the most recent being Milton Milan in 2000. Since 2005 the school system and police department have been operated by the State of New Jersey; the takeover will expire in 2012. In 2009, Camden had the highest crime rate in the U.S. with 2,333 violent crimes per 100,000 people while the national average was 455 per 100,000 Camden public schools spend $17,000 per student per year yet only two thirds of the students graduate (with questionable literacy).
Camden City Council Approves Massive Police And Fire Layoffs « CBS Philly – News, Sports, Weather, Traffic and the Best of Philadelphia

December 2, 2010

CAMDEN, NJ (CBS) – Camden City Council, as expected, voted Thursday to lay off almost 400 workers, half of them police officers and firefighters, to bridge a $26.5 million deficit.

That’s about a quarter of the city’s entire work force.

Five members of City Council voted unanimously to approve the layoff plan — two other members were absent. The cuts take effect in mid-January.

Exactly how many city workers will be affected is still an open question, although nearly half the city’s police and a third of the firefighters are slated to go.

Karl Walco is with the union that represents non-uniformed Camden city workers.

“If we agreed to everything that the city proposed in concessions, it would only have a minor impact on the number of layoffs,” Walco told the council members.

No argument from Council. They sat impassively as workers and residents alike voiced their frustration.

When it was over, Council president Frank Moran suggested they’re not to blame.

“We didn’t put a price tag on public safety. Unfortunately, the governor of the State of New Jersey put that price tag on it,” he said at the packed Council meeting.

That price tag is $69 million, in transitional aid. Moran suggested that Camden residents should vent to Governor Chris Christie.

After the vote, council members and Camden Mayor Dana Redd avoided reporters by going into their offices.

Reported by David Madden, KYW Newsradio 1060.


No comments:

Post a Comment