WILDWOOD — Mayor Ernie Troiano said Saturday afternoon he was “disappointed beyond words” by a veto by Gov. Phil Murphy of a bill that would give the city $60 million over the next 15 years for improvements to the Boardwalk.
The measure called for $4 million a year to go to the Greater Wildwoods Tourism Improvement and Development Authority.
https://www.pressofatlanticcity.com/news/local/wildwood-mayor-disappointed-beyond-words-after-murphy-vetoes-boardwalk-bill/article_f340d055-d362-59f0-927c-aaf41933695b.html
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https://www.pressofatlanticcity.com/news/local/wildwood-mayor-disappointed-beyond-words-after-murphy-vetoes-boardwalk-bill/article_f340d055-d362-59f0-927c-aaf41933695b.html
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Tension between South Jersey Democratic lawmakers and Gov. Phil Murphy continues to boil.
The governor announced Friday he rejected a measure to give $56 million to Cape May County to spend on the boardwalk in and around Wildwood. The money would have been doled out $4 million a year over 14 years.
Murphy’s veto of the bill is the latest in a
string of freezing millions in state government spending that rankled
the south, where lawmakers that represent the area expressed their
anger.
“I am furious at Governor
Murphy’s shortsightedness on this issue,” state Sen. Bob Andrzejczak,
D-Cape May, said in a statement. “The appropriation in this bill was a
drop in the bucket when compared to the millions of dollars the
Wildwoods send back to Trenton.”
The
money would have gone to the Greater Wildwoods Tourism Improvement and
Development Authority for boardwalk construction, repairs and
maintenance.
Murphy, in his veto
message, said he couldn’t sign the bill because it would run afoul of
state spending rules. But the bill’s sponsors didn’t buy it.
“As
a small-business owner, I know the importance of making the right
investments, and this is the dictionary definition of the right
investment,” Assemblyman Matthew Milam, D-Vineland, said. "We need to be
supporting our small businesses more than ever, not shutting the door
in their face.”
The veto was the latest move by Murphy to block state money from going to South Jersey, the local lawmakers say.
State Senate President Stephen Sweeney, Trenton’s top lawmaker, accused Murphy of exacting political payback after he froze $235 million in state spending last month
following a contentious budget battle. The governor wanted a
millionaires tax, but the Democratic-controlled Legislature refused to
give him one for the second year in a row.
Sweeney says the governor did it to hurt
Democrats who wouldn’t go along with him and Sweeney’s home base —
especially by freezing money for cancer funding and Stockton University.
The two have routinely locked horns.
But tempers hit a fever pitch after Murphy’s special task force formed to investigate how the state gave away lucrative tax incentives to businesses under former Gov. Chris Christie’s administration put South Jersey Democratic powerbroker George Norcross III in its crosshairs.
The
special panel is examining the payment of millions in incentives to
projects and companies in Camden tied to Norcross — a childhood friend
and close political ally of Sweeney.
Sweeney plans to call Murphy’s state treasurer, Elizabeth Muoio, to appear before a Senate committee to explain why certain programs were chosen.
Last week, Murphy denied acting with a bias against Sweeney’s region.
“I say with great respect I don’t agree,” the governor said.
“I think if you look on the items on the list — again, a list that we
support — I don’t think the data, the actual facts support that.”
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