Woodbridge set to unveil budget — will cut in state aid mean higher taxes?

by Sergio Bichao on Sep 2nd | Email

Mayor John E. McCormac

WOODBRIDGE, NJ -- Township officials aren't saying whether property owners should expect to pay more taxes this year. But their comments regarding a $6 million loss in state aid might be a harbinger of bad news.

Council President Jim Major said Tuesday that the administration expects to introduce the 2010-2011 municipal budget at the council's Sept. 21 meeting.

The township's budget year began in July. Last year's budget wasn't introduced until November and wasn't adopted until the end of December.

The $114.2 million budget introduced last year called for a 10 percent increase in the amount raised through property taxes. The average homeowner was hit with an extra $129 tax bill, not including increased state and school taxes.

The municipality has even less revenue to work with this year after Gov. Chris Christie slashed about $6 million in aid to Woodbridge.

“The cut in aid is significant and very difficult to overcome,” Mayor John E. McCormac said. “We've already eliminated 80 jobs, so further cuts in aid are particularly hard to deal with because there are no easy decisions left.”

The drop in payroll came through retirements and resignations. The only department that has bolstered its ranks is the police force.

McCormac unsuccessfully tried to negotiate a salary freeze with the union representing police brass. Their contract expired in December.

“We asked them and they said no,” McCormac said. The contract with the rank-and-file police union expires next year while agreements with the remaining four municipal employee unions end in December.

What may help the bottom line are retirements in the police department and an early retirement package the administration might be able to offer its public works employees because of a merger this year with the school district's custodians, McCormac said.

The township submitted its early retirement proposal to the state last month. If the plan isn't approved or rejected by the 21st, McCormac said the administration will introduce a budget that figures savings based on up to 15 anticipated retirements from public works.