When a man on a ledge tells his partner that the only way they can escape disaster is to “jump off a cliff together,” it’s wise to question their reasoning.
When Butch made this suggestion in the movie, “Butch Cassidy and the Sundance Kid,” everybody knew both these guys were train robbers trying to elude a posse.
When Governor Christie used this analogy to stump for his plan to avoid statewide fiscal ruin, he sounded like a political leader trying to spread the pain around to everybody — teachers, cops, commuters, etc.
Nobody seriously figured this Butch was thinking of holding up a train or a bus.
But to close NJ Transit’s looming $300 million deficit, commuter rail tickets are rising 25 percent, two trains are being eliminated on each of 11 lines, and 50 of 240 bus routes are being terminated.
On the administrative side, executive salaries are being cut 5 percent, the workforce is being reduced by 2 percent, and matches to 401(k) retirement accounts will be trimmed 33 percent. All this leaves an impossible equation that boils down to higher cost and less service.
“Shame on the governor!” shouted a student at Friday’s budget hearing in Paterson.
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Note to Governor Butch: There’s a posse tracking you, and it includes thousands of persistent, middle-class people like Mark Klypka.
They favor your stand against soaring public employee pensions and other non-essential government spending. But they also know you’re on record in favor of restoring tax breaks for the wealthy. And they’re wondering how you can discourage mass transit in a state with some of the most crowded, crumbling highways in the nation.
They want a more consistent approach. For starters, shielding those with cars and government jobs is inconsistent with trimming transportation for those who are barely hanging on.
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