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REGIONAL DAY SCHOOLS NOT CLOSING!
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as per this document.. regional day schools will not.. repeat will not be closing..
parents.. please contact your local districts to verify that your children will not be transitioned.. -
CWA backs furloughs and freeze on wages
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The state's largest public employee union would accept a wage freeze and unpaid furlough days to help reduce spending under a tentative deal, Gov. Jon Corzine said yesterday.
Corzine called the agreement with the Communications Workers of America "very important for our budget to make sure that we get something that is a very substantial giveback." He said negotiations are continuing with other unions along with the CWA.
With his Republican opponents quick to criticize the accord -- and link it to the politics of Corzine's re-election campaign -- the governor and the union defended it as a compromise amid a recession-ravaged state budget.
"There is a tentative agreement on wage givebacks and furloughs that has yet more details to be ironed out, and that has to be appropriately negotiated with other unions," Corzine said yesterday following a news conference on school construction in Newark. "I expect there will be an agreement on the terms that are negotiated at the collective bargaining table, not just with CWA but with all of the various parties that are involved."
Corzine did not provide details on the terms of the deal, but senior Democratic officials told The Star-Ledger Tuesday the pact would include 10 furlough days in the budget year starting July 1, along with a wage freeze and some "bankable" paid personal days that workers could take in the future.
Union officials issued a statement yesterday, saying that negotiations "have created the framework for an agreement that will deliver significant savings to the state and provide job protections to our members."
"But we are still working on language, the document is not finalized, and the characterization of the agreement in the press is incomplete," the statement from CWA District One said.
Representatives of other unions that represent state workers, including the American Federation of State, County and Municipal Employees and the American Federation of Labor and Congress of Industrial Organizations, could not be reached for comment on the tentative deal yesterday.
Senate Budget and Appropriations Committee chair Barbara Buono (D-Middlesex) said the tentative agreement, if approved by other unions, would lead to at least $300 million in savings for the $28.6 billion budget proposed for the new fiscal year.
The deal would remove "a major obstacle in passing a budget," she said.
"It's not even debatable that this is historic -- that we opened a previously negotiated contract and achieved right-on-the-nose budget savings without people losing their jobs," Buono said.
Corzine imposed two furlough days before the current budget year ends June 30 and was seeking 12 more days in the new budget.
Union members have protested the furloughs and criticized the governor. The CWA planned to protest outside Corzine's re-election kickoff event in West Orange on Tuesday night, but later called it off.
The Democratic officials, who asked not to be named because they were not authorized to publicly discuss the negotiations, previously said the specter of a union protest raised concerns for the White House because Vice President Joe Biden was on hand to praise Corzine.
Republicans said the decision not to force the pro-labor Biden to cross a picket line cost New Jerseyans money.
"It was a taxpayer-funded political event because his giveaways to the CWA -- in order to have the vice president not have to worry about crossing a picket line -- is typical of the timidity of Jon Corzine," said Chris Christie, Corzine's Republican opponent in the fall election.
Corzine called reports of Biden's concerns about a picket line "speculative" and stressed that the vice president did not alter the terms of the accord with the union.
"Not one single I or T was dotted or crossed differently with regard to the direction that we're taking," said Corzine, who has spent months pushing for a wage freeze-furlough combination as an alternative to more than 7,000 layoffs. He said the urgency of resolving a deal was accelerated because "layoff notices were actually posted last Friday."
The CWA statement also swiped at Christie, saying his "inaccurate and uninformed speculation about yesterday's events betrays a troubling disregard for the facts."
Statehouse Bureau reporter John Reitmeyer contributed to this report. -
NJ governor, unions reach tentative furlough deal
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TRENTON, N.J. - New Jersey's largest state worker union and the Corzine administration say they have struck a tentative deal on wage freezes and furloughs.
No details were released Wednesday.
Gov. Jon S. Corzine threatened to lay off thousands of state workers unless he got about $400 million in concessions from labor as he grapples with a budget shortfall.
On Wednesday, the governor said details of the agreement have yet to be worked out. He said other unions besides the Communications Workers of America have yet to sign on.
Bob Master, of the CWA's District 1, described the agreement as a framework "that will deliver significant savings to the state and provide job protections to our members."
The two sides have been in negotiations for weeks. -
NJ gov, union deal avoids layoffs
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TRENTON, N.J. - New Jersey's largest state worker union and the Corzine administration have struck a tentative deal that freezes wages for 18 months and requires 10 furlough days but guarantees no layoffs through 2010.
The proposed memorandum of agreement, obtained by The Associated Press, would modify the existing contract between the Communications Workers of America and the state, if members ratify it.
Facing a severe budget shortfall, Gov. Jon S. Corzine threatened to lay off as many at 7,000 state workers unless he achieved millions in concessions from labor. The tentative deal would achieve $309 million in savings if the other unions agree, according to a person familiar with the talks. The person spoke on condition of anonymity because they were not authorized to speak for the administration.
The tentative deal defers the 3.5 percent pay increase union workers were due in July until Jan. 1, 2011. Workers also will be required to take 10 furlough days before July of next year, including the day after Thanksgiving and Lincoln's Birthday. They will not have to take a furlough day this month.
In exchange for the concessions, totaling 7.5 percent of employees' salaries, the administration has pledged not to lay off state workers through the end of next year. The state also will create a Paid Leave Bank, in which workers who take the unpaid furlough days will be credited with seven days off they can use any time after 2010.
The governor on Wednesday confirmed that a tentative agreement had been reached, but said details had yet to be worked out. He said other unions had yet to agree, even in principle.
"There is a tentative agreement with regard to a wage freeze and furloughs, but the details need to be ironed out," Corzine said. "I expect we will have an agreement. It will be an agreement on the terms that were negotiated at the collective bargaining table not just with CWA, but with all parties involved."
Bob Master, of the CWA's District 1, described the agreement as a "framework," and said it would "deliver significant savings to the state and provide job protections to our members."
The two sides have been in negotiations for weeks, but the talks intensified as the gubernatorial primary drew near.
Some union workers will be exempt.
Bill Lavin, president of the state Firefighters Mutual Benevolent Association, which represents municipal firefighters, said police and firefighter unions have gone to court to protect public services workers from being furloughed.
The CWA reportedly had planned to protest outside the West Orange arena where Corzine was accepting the Democrats' nomination for a second term Tuesday night, but canceled their plans, indicating that a deal was near.
That drew criticism from Corzine rival Christopher Christie, the GOP candidate for governor, who called the governor's victory party "a political rally at the taxpayers' expense."
And, Assembly Republican leader Alex DeCroce, R-Morris Plains, said Corzine hurriedly struck a deal with the union to avoid the political embarrassment of having Vice President Joe Biden cancel his appearance with the governor rather than cross a union picket line.

