Regionalize and Shared Services





    The rough outlines of some of the plans intended to chip away at New Jersey's property tax burden became clearer Wednesday as lawmakers discussed bills that would promote merging towns and consolidating government.

    Much of the focus remained on a proposal being pushed by Sen. Joseph M. Kyrillos Jr., R-Monmouth, to create a special commission that would recommend municipal mergers, but a key lawmaker called for a tweak that could alter the bill's impact.

    A Paterson tenement collapses and firefighters are unsure how many people are trapped inside. They do their best to get to possible survivors, but a paucity of search and rescue equipment hinders their efforts. They're forced to watch and wait helplessly as vital minutes pass before assistance arrives.

    The scenario was a very real possibility for firefighters in the Silk City, in Hackensack, and in West New York -- pretty much all of North Jersey, with the state's search and rescue team based in Lakehurst.

    But a fleet of shiny new rescue trucks unveiled Thursday at Liberty State Park in Jersey City will help change that, authorities said. The trucks -- neatly arranged in a crescent in what once was the shadow of the Twin Towers -- will be used by a new Urban Search and Rescue (USAR) Strike Team aimed at responding quickly across the region.

    The civilian leaders and chiefs of the eight municipal police departments in southern coastal Monmouth County, which Belmar proposes merging into one force, will meet Sept. 12 in Spring Lake to discuss the idea.

    Belmar Mayor Kenneth E. Pringle and Police Chief Jack Hill are the architects of the plan to combine the forces of Belmar, Brielle, Lake Como, Manasquan, Sea Girt, Spring Lake, Spring Lake Heights and Wall into a South Monmouth Police
    Department.

    Assembly Speaker aims to scale back size of government.  Proposes shared services, reforms for property tax relief to aid N.J. residents.  Proposes shared services, reforms for property tax relief to aid N.J. residents.   The proposals include:
    • Changes in Civil Service rules for towns that seek to merge services.
    • New broad duties for county school superintendents toenable them to be involved in local school budgets and other decisions.
    • Authorize referendums that would create K-12 school districts.
    • Reform the state's school funding formula.
    • End pension practices that boost payouts.
    • Move school board and fire district elections to November.
    • Eliminate public voting on school budgets that are under the state budget growth cap.
    • Require all municipalities to post annual budgets and details of employment contracts on a website.

    Encourage shared services
    StarLedger Editorial
    Monday, April 10, 2006

    With money tight in the Statehouse and in town halls across the state, elected officials at all levels of government are looking for ways to economize. An obvious one is to share services.

    But let's be realistic: In a state where mayors and town council members consider home rule as distinctly New Jersey as the Turnpike and the Pine Barrens, convincing them to relinquish control over anything won't be easy.



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