![]() WHAT TRENTON MADEĪN INTRODUCTION - Murphy announces DOH commissioner pick to replace Persichilli, by POLITICO’s Daniel Han: Gov. ![]() RWJUH is already among the highest-staffed hospitals in the state, and our nurses are currently the highest-paid in New Jersey. Multiple attempts to prevent the strike were rejected, including accepting the union’s demands and offering arbitration. We maintain good-faith negotiation efforts with the union representing nurses. No one benefits from the strike, least of all our nurses. We at Robert Wood Johnson University Hospital are deeply disappointed with United Steel Workers 4-200’s extreme action to strike. announcement and discussion with NJ Chamber of Commerce President Tom Bracken. WHERE’S MURPHY? - In Newark for an 11 a.m. HAPPY BIRTHDAY - Steve Oroho, Verlina Reynolds-Jackson. These are a few of the excessive things.” - The first verse of Assembly Republicans’ parody of the budget’s Christmas Tree items to the tune of “My Favorite Things” QUOTE OF THE DAY: “Hoboken cheerleading programs are bleeding. Prol’s statement may not have addressed the Brindle controversy directly, but it does make me doubt the Brindle matter is settled. And on Tuesday, he said this: “Above all else, we will be transparent and fair and respect the dignity of all … I was surprised at the prior meeting at some of the treatment the public received when they were given notice of the opportunity to speak and turned away.” Now Prol - an executive board member of Garden State Equality - is in charge of the agency. They spoke anyway, having a heated argument with the commissioners. When ELEC met in March under its previous leadership, two leaders of Garden State Equality sought to speak against Brindle but weren’t permitted to by the agency’s previous commissioner, despite a press release for the meeting that had invited public testimony. ![]() But Chairman Thomas Prol’s remarks could possibly be read as a hint that the Brindle matter is not settled. But we already knew those complaints would have to be dismissed. Following an executive session, they dismissed 107 “matters” - presumably campaign finance complaints rendered moot by the Elections Transparency Act’s two-year statute of limitations, including major complaints against three Democratic PACS, because transparency. The new commissioners didn’t do all that much at their first meeting. It’s the first time the agency has had a full complement of commissioners in years - since one meeting in 2017 and, other than that, since 2011. The Election Law Enforcement Commission held the first meeting under its new leadership on Tuesday, and Executive Director Jeff Brindle, under fire by the Murphy administration for an allegedly anti-gay email, is still in his job. Presented by Robert Wood Johnson University Hospital
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