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Doing more with less doesn’t always have good results, according to the director of New Jersey’s Sierra Club.
Jeff Tittel made that point in a March 2 opinion column on NJ.com, specifically referencing the state’s Department of Environmental Protection.
"DEP has 2,812 employees, the lowest level since the mid-’80s," Tittel wrote, questioning cuts in Gov. Chris Christie’s proposed fiscal year 2014 budget that impact various environmental funds and suggesting that low staffing means fewer people ensuring the state’s air is clean and people are protected from flooding.
Is Tittel right that the state’s environmental arm is reducing staffing at great risk to New Jerseyans?
Not quite.
First, let’s review the number of people on staff at the DEP and how those levels have fluctuated through the years. Then we’ll compare current staffing with levels from the mid-1980s.
Tittel claimed the DEP has 2,812 employees, but that figure is the staffing level proposed for the fiscal year 2014 budget, according to Larry Ragonese, DEP spokesman. Currently, the DEP has 2,734 employees, he said. So Tittel is off by 78 workers.
It’s worth noting that Christie has the final say on the budget and must approve it by June 30. The new fiscal year starts on July 1.
So how is DEP staffing now compared with the mid-1980s?
We asked Ragonese for annual DEP staffing levels from 1970 to present, but since Tittel wasn’t more specific than "the mid-80s," we’ll look at years 1983 through 1987 and compare those with more recent years.
NJ.com, New Jersey’s environment is under attack in Christie’s budget: Opinion, March 2, 2013, accessed March 6 and 14, 2013
Phone interview with Larry Ragonese, spokesman, New Jersey Department of Environmental Protection, March 6 and 7, 2013
Phone interview with Jeff Tittel, director, New Jersey Sierra Club, March 13, 2013
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