... I don't care about community criticism. We run the school district in Newark, not them....Governor Chris Christie
Ras Baraka, a mayoral candidate who is also Central High School’s principal, said Christie "told the truth at least."
"He does run the school district, not us. That’s why we need to get rid of him," Baraka said Wednesday. "To say that he doesn’t care about what Newark residents think shows that he doesn’t represent Newarkers."
http://www.nj.com/news/index.ssf/2013/09/christie_to_ newark_we_run_the_school_ district.html)
Recipient of New Jersey pension deal housed charity run by Gov. Christie's wife. "Time to put the cuffs on Chris Christie -- not for the bridge scandal, but for this," Michael Moore....And what a fine job running the Newark schools the state of New Jersey has done over the past few decades. Here a Newark teacher comments the clergy condemnation of Cami Anderson and Marie Corfield's petition to oppose Christie as the keynote speaker at Rowan College. I hope all the ed majors boo.
The nearly eighty Newark clergy members are to be commended for resurrecting their moral voices in condemnation of State Superintendent Cami Anderson's One Newark Plan. The part of their message that stuck in my craw, however, is the pandering to the education reformers regarding support of data driven instruction.
Newark teachers have spent the week pondering the outcome of Anderson's equivalency request to waive tenure and seniority laws in order to "right size" the district. Acting Education Commissioner David Hespe has inherited the request from his predecessor Chris Cerf who has migrated to the greener pastures of Amplify. Have any pink slips gone out for the massive layoff? What is the deadline to notify teachers that they will not be employed by the Newark Public Schools in September? Noticeably absent from the public square is reigning AFT Queen Randi Weingarten. Is she in Finland checking out highly performing schools and exemplary teachers, which are reportedly found there in abundance?
Marie Corfield has issued an all call for signatures on her petition requesting the President of Rowan University to reconsider his choice of Governor Chris Christie as keynote commencement speaker. Sorry Marie, but the last place I need my name right now is on a petition criticizing Chris Christie. Hopefully, there are others out there who are not in my company skating on thin ice.
Allow me to cut to the chase. Will the multitude of clergy have a meaningful impact on the community discourse in Newark? It gives me a measure of comfort to know that I am not wandering alone in the desert during Passover. As far as our governor is concerned, Chris Christie could not be less interested in what anyone in Newark has to say. Should Chris Christie under the cloud of state and federal investigations be paraded around as an exemplar for our youth by delivering commencement proclamations? Will the modern day pharaohs end my enslavement to the State of New Jersey control of the Newark schools? In the words of the spiritual, "Go down Moses and let my people go!"
A Newark Teacher
Baraka praises Ministers Fight for a Moratorium on One Newark School Reorganization PlanStatement by Ras Baraka“Nearly one year ago, the City Council passed my resolution calling for a moratorium on all of Cami Anderson’s public school initiatives. A year later, Ms. Anderson continues to run away from input by Newark citizens and continues to carry out her relentless drive toclose our neighborhood schools.
Today, the ministers of Newark have joined me in calling for a moratorium on the destructive One Newark Plan to close our schools, a plan already being implemented against the will of the people of Newark.”
While we're on Christie, David Sirota takes this shot -- I bet Cuomo is also up to his ears in stuff like this.
Recipient of New Jersey pension deal housed charity run by Gov.
Christie's wife. "Time to put the cuffs on Chris Christie -- not for the
bridge scandal, but for this," Michael Moore.
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A PandoDaily investigation has discovered evidence that Gov.
Chris Christie's pending deal to award a $300 million pension
management contract to a controversial hedge fund is in violation of
state anti-corruption laws.
New Jersey state pay-to-play statutes prohibit state contractors
from directly or indirectly financially supporting the election
campaigns of state officials. Those statutes also explicitly prohibit
the use of outside groups or family members to circumvent that ban.
Additionally, separate Department of Treasury rules appear to
prohibit public pension contracts from being awarded to investment firms
whose employees have made significant financial contributions to
political entities organized to operate in New Jersey state elections.
Those laws also bar investment firms doing business with the state from
making contributions "for the purpose of influencing any election for
State office."
Yet, late last month, the New Jersey State Investment Council
moved to award a controversial $300 million investment contract to
Chatham Asset Management, despite the fact that Chatham's principal, and
a woman living at his address and sharing his surname, donated more
than $50,000 to a Republican election group that oversaw major portions
of Gov. Christie's 2013 re-election operation. The proposed investment
is already highly controversial given the hedge fund also reportedly
owns a stake in the Atlantic City casino, Revel.
Craig Holman of the watchdog group Public Citizen, which
originally lobbied for the pay-to-play statute, said that the $300m
offer "appears to be not an indirect violation, but a direct violation
of the law."
New Jersey lawmakers seem to agree. "The optics are clearly
horrible and the intent of the law is that this not happen," said New
Jersey Assemblyman John Wisniewski, the co-leader of the New Jersey
Legislative Select Committee on Investigation. "There is a violation of
the pay to play laws where someone donates funds to the RNC that are
later used in New Jersey, and then that person receives a contract - in
this case, a management of a large amount of money in return."
A spokesperson for Chatham Management appeared determined to
distance the firm from the proposed (and already widely reported) deal,
telling Pando: "Chatham Asset Management is not currently, nor has
previously, managed funds for the State of New Jersey."
Incredibly, they then threatened to sue me, and Pando, if we
reported that they had agreed to accept the proposed deal, saying:
"Please be advised that if you choose to run a factually incorrect
story, we reserve all legal rights we may have against you and your
employer."
Following the campaign money from the RNC into New Jersey
According to an RNC press release
from November 2013, celebrating Christie's re-election victory: "The
RNC worked alongside the Christie campaign" on grassroots organizing
efforts in his most recent campaign.
The press release was confirmed by press reports: The Newark Star-Ledger
ran a story headlined "Republican National Committee spends big to
persuade Jersey minorities to vote GOP," reporting that the RNC's
operation in New Jersey spent at least $500,000 in the state
- and ultimately up to $1.5 million. The money was part of the group's
high-profile initiative to organize voters in support of the governor
bid for re-election.
One of the major financial backers of the RNC in the lead up to
that initiative was Chatham Asset Management. According to Federal
Election Commission documents (embedded below), the firm's principal,
Anthony Melchiorre, donated $22,500 to the RNC on May 5, 2012 and then
$8,300 to the RNC on August 15, 2012. Andrea Melchiorre also donated
$17,500 to the RNC on the same day, and then donated another $10,000 to
the group on October 8, 2012.
Weeks after Christie was re-elected - and less than 18 months
after Melchiorre's latest campaign donation to the RNC - the governor's
state investment council announced
its intention to invest $300 million with Melchiorre's firm, Chatham
Asset Management. A memorandum written in November 2013 by the State of
New Jersey outlines the state's intention to invest $300m of public
money in a "Chatham Asset High Yield Separate Account." The minutes
of a meeting of the New Jersey State Investment Council held around one
week later show that the investment was discussed by the Council which
found no impediments to the deal proceeding.
New Jersey laws bar campaign contributions from investment managers doing business with the state
The decision to award Chatham Asset Management the contract was made despite State Investment Council rules explicitly banning
investment managers doing business with New Jersey from making (or
having made) any political contributions "for the purpose of influencing
any election for State office." Those rules bar pension contracts from
going to investment managers who have made such contributions in any of
the two years leading up to a proposed pension contract.
Additionally, section nine of New Jersey's pay-to-play law
prohibits using outside groups - like, for instance, the RNC - or
family members to circumvent pay-to-play statutes barring state
contractors from donating to groups that financially support state
election campaigns. That law declares that a contract is invalid if a
contractor has contributed to a state candidate or party organization
directly supporting the election of that candidate. The law says such a
contract is invalid if a contractor "engage(s) in any exchange or
contributions to circumvent the intent" of such a prohibition - by, for
instance, routing campaign contributions through an outside group or a
family member.
The law also stipulates that it applies to contributions "within
the eighteen months immediately preceding the commencement of
negotiations for the contract or agreement."
"If these contributions were made to the RNC in order to get
around state laws, then it is a violation of the law," said Melanie
Sloan, executive director of the watchdog group Citizens for
Responsibility and Ethics In Washington. "New Jersey law is clear: you
cannot do indirectly what you are prohibited from doing directly."
A spokesperson for Governor Christie contacted by Pando two
hours ahead of our original publication time said they needed more time
to "verify and chase down" the facts surrounding Chatham's investment
and the apparent violation of Treasury rules. Citing the fact that
several New Jersey state offices were closed due to the Easter break,
the spokesperson added "at this point we can't authenticate what David
is alleging in his report." Robert Grady, head of the New Jersey pension
investment council, did not respond to an email request for comment.
The RNC did not respond to request for comment.
We agreed to give Christie's spokesperson an additional hour to
confirm the facts - all of which are supported by publicly available
documents linked above and embedded below. As of that revised
publication time, Governor Christie has offered no additional comment.
We will update this story immediately with any subsequent comment.
Update:
The Republican National Committee, the Christie administration and
New Jersey Working Families have issued responses to our report.
RNC spokesperson Ryan Mahoney said only "These claims aren't accurate." He offered no factual refutation of Pando's reporting.
On behalf of Gov. Christie, New Jersey Treasury department Chris Santarelli told Pando:
The donations from Chatham Asset Management to the RNC
which you have called into question are not in violation of the
Department of Treasury rules regarding impermissible political
contributions made by funds doing business with the State. It would be a
violation of the regulation if the firm or an investment professional
of the firm made a political contribution "to a Federal party committee
or other political committee or organization for the purpose of
influencing State or local elections governed by."
The purpose of the RNC is not to influence elections in the
State of New Jersey and donations to the organization cannot be
earmarked for a particular race.
The Christie administration's statement appears to directly
contradict previous statements by the Republican National Committee.
Only a few months ago, the RNC openly boasted about "work(ing) alongside
the Christie campaign," and told New Jersey's largest paper about using
hundreds of thousands of dollars to boost the Christie campaign's
get-out-the-vote effort.
Santarelli also insisted that despite the size of the campaign
contributions in question, the Christie administration's investment
council "was not aware of the contributions you have called into
question."
Analilia Mejia, Director of NJ Working Families, told Pando:
"Details of self-dealing and corruption continue to pile up around Chris
Christie. If this report is accurate, his reelection was tainted with
dirty money. Our state's pension fund should not be for sale to the
highest bidder. As a prosecutor, Chris Christie held public officials to
a much higher standard than he seems to hold himself. If these
allegations are true, Christie is not qualified to lead our state and we
must again call for his resignation."
[David Sirota is a staff writer for PandoDaily,
television commentator and nationally syndicated weekly newspaper
columnist living in Denver, Colorado. He is the author of the books "Hostile Takeover," "The Uprising" and "Back to Our Future" and has written for The New York Times Magazine, Harper's, Wired, Vice, The Nation and Salon.com. He covers the intersection of politics, technology and popular culture.]
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