New Jersey voters took a stand on school spending and property taxes Tuesday, rejecting 260 of 479 school budgets across 19 counties, according to unofficial results in statewide school elections.Elections have consequences and it's a sure thing that none of this would have happened had Obama's candidate Jon Corzine been re-elected. Voters are tired of throwing more and more money at education and getting less and less results.
In the proposed state budget he unveiled last month, Gov. Chris Christie slashed $820 million in aid to school districts and urged voters to defeat budgets if teachers in their schools did not agree to one-year wage freezes. The salvo ignited a heated debate with the state’s largest teachers union.
Christie said the cuts were necessary to help plug an $11 billion state budget gap.
In many districts Tuesday, the governor made himself heard as 54 percent of the spending plans were rejected, according to unofficial returns. If the trend continues, it would mark the most budget defeats in New Jersey since 1976, when 56 percent failed. Typically, voters approve more than 70 percent of the school budgets.
Wednesday, April 21, 2010
NJ Governor Christie Gets Results
With a teacher's strike looming here in South Orange County it might be time to take the approach that voters in New Jersey did, at the prompting of their Republican Gov. Chris Christie:
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