
Wall Street Journal: Under Gov. Murphy, NJ Is Dead Last in COVID Outcomes, Confirming Sunlight’s Report
April 12, 2022
The NJEA Proudly Boasts About Its Quid Pro Quo Relationship with Gov. Murphy
April 22, 2022Sunlight had a chance to look at the NJEA’s latest financial statements (for the fiscal year ending August 31, 2021) and there were some interesting nuggets of information:
- NJEA Leaderships pensions continue to be gold-plated and very secure. Sunlight did an extensive report on the NJEA leadership’s gold-plated, well-funded pensions – as contrasted with the NJEA membership’s modest and severely underfunded pensions. The FY2021 financials show that the NJEA leadership’s pensions continue to be an exceptionally strong 96%-funded (in other words, there are 96 cents set aside for every dollar owed), and this is using a very conservative 2.8% discount rate. Remember that NJEA members’ pensions are funded at 35.6% using a 7% discount rate. If members’ pensions used a 2.8% discount rate, their funding ratio would be substantially lower and at deep crisis levels.
- The NJEA’s Super PAC has $6.4 million reserve (slush fund?) funded by members’ dues. Not only does the NJEA pour millions of dollars into its Super PAC, Garden State Forward, every year ($9.4 million in FY2021), but it now has $6.4 million in assets as some sort of floating reserve – dare we say “slush fund” – available to be used to win elections wherever and whenever the NJEA leadership chooses. That’s a lot of firepower lying around unused, which all goes to show that the NJEA is simply awash with members’ highest-in-the-nation dues and content to leave it sitting around.
- The NJEA is clearly losing members. In FY2021, the NJEA raised its highest-in-the-nation dues from $950 to $991, a 4.3% increase. Yet the NJEA’s dues revenues only increased 1.4%. That leaves a difference of -2.9%. The NJEA no longer provides actual membership levels and now we can guess why. We know from news reports that a significant number of teachers retired early during the pandemic, and we know that some teachers quit the NJEA because they no longer wanted to be members. So Sunlight asks: how many members does the NJEA have?
OVERARCHING THEME: The NJEA Leadership continues to look out for its own interests, making sure their pensions are gold-plated and very secure and that they have millions of members’ dues-money to spread their influence around New Jersey’s political system. No wonder the NJEA is losing members.
