Opinion: Budget bill highlights how Washington lacks a sense of irony
I'm old enough to remember when Republican President Ronald Reagan, during his 1988 State of the Union Address, dropped a heavy stack of papers, comprising that year's budgeting megabill, next to the podium. He declared that 'Congress shouldn't send another one,' because he would not sign it.
He got a rare bipartisan standing ovation for that.
Many of you are old enough to remember when former House Speaker Nancy Pelosi said of the Affordable Care Act, 'We have to pass the bill so that you can find out what is in it.'
Her next sentence clarified that she meant the bill could be understood best 'away from the fog of the controversy.' But that first sentence soon became a political rallying cry for some Republicans upset with the passage of a bill so large no one could properly digest it.
Times change. This is a much more hyper-partisan period in history. It's apparently so partisan that party faithful don't get the irony.
Today's proposed budget — another megabill totaling more than 1,000 pages — is being pushed by a Republican president. He apparently doesn't mind how big and heavy it is.
Republican Rep. Thomas Massie of Kentucky posted a plaintive plea on X last week before the House voted: 'Shouldn't we take more than a few hours to read a bill this big and this consequential?'
Was he implying we may have to pass it to see what's in it?
So far, we know it makes changes to Medicaid, extends the tax cuts enacted during the first Trump term, removes some tax credits for clean energy and increases spending for border security. A measure to eliminate taxes on tips passed the Senate separately on a unanimous vote and is now awaiting action in the House.
We also know that, taken together, these would add $3.8 trillion over 10 years to the rapidly growing national debt, according to Congressional Budget Office estimates.
A lot of tips probably already don't get reported as income, but the Peter G. Peterson Foundation estimates the no-tax bill on tips would cost $110 billion over 10 years, even though it's limited to people earning less than $160,000. That may not be much in a Washington where deficits run in the trillions, but it's still moving in the wrong direction.
But the bill doesn't stop there. It would bar states from regulating artificial intelligence for 10 years. Utah has been a leader in passing laws that protect its people from malicious AI, including its use for mental health services.
But the budget bill tells states to repeal all such laws.
It also would curtail the federal courts' power to hold government personnel in contempt for disobeying judicial orders — an ominous provision given the number of Trump actions courts have found to be illegal.
It's a rule Republicans may quickly regret the next time a Democrat takes control of the White House.
The '80s are long gone. We no longer have Reagan and his eye-catching stack of budget bills. Everything's electronic these days, anyway.
But we do have Elon Musk, the DOGE slasher, who told CBS News he doesn't like what he's seeing.
'I was disappointed to see the massive spending bill, frankly, which increases the budget deficit, not just decreases it, and undermines the work that the DOGE team is doing,' he said, adding this interesting observation: 'I think a bill can be big or it can be beautiful, but I don't know if it can be both.'
Strip away the PR, and budgets are statements about priorities. That's true whether it's your household budget or that of a stamp-collecting club. By that measure, this bill speaks loudly and with increasing clarity as it awaits Senate action.
But what its size and breadth say about a representative government's deliberative process, and what its totality says about overspending, are causes for concern. So is its implied message about political parties and the fluidity of principles. I'm guessing Mr. Reagan would not be amused.
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Vox
30 minutes ago
- Vox
The big, bad bond market could derail Trump's big, beautiful bill
is a senior correspondent and head writer for Vox's Future Perfect section and has worked at Vox since 2014. He is particularly interested in global health and pandemic prevention, anti-poverty efforts, economic policy and theory, and conflicts about the right way to do philanthropy. To pass a law in the United States, you need to jump through a lot of hurdles. A bill has to first clear a committee in the House or Senate. (In the case of Republicans' tax legislation this year, its components had to clear 11 different committees.) The House Rules Committee has to agree for it to come to the floor for a vote. It has to pass that vote. In the Senate, it has to get 60 votes to beat a potential filibuster, or else obey a set of byzantine rules allowing it to pass with a simple majority. But another entity gets a vote, an entity not mentioned in the Constitution or in congressional rules or even physically located in Washington, DC. That entity is the bond market, and right now, it is very pissed. Currently, the US makes up for any budget deficits it incurs by issuing bonds of various durations to cover the difference. It auctions those bonds — essentially IOUs issued by the Treasury Department — on the open market, where investors (banks, hedge funds, foreign central banks, pension funds, etc.) can bid on them. To get them to bid, the US has to pay interest on the bond. And when the US borrows a lot, and especially if its fiscal policy indicates that the country may reach a point where it can't pay back what it owes, investors will demand to receive more interest to compensate for the risk of default. That means the US has to pay more every year to service its past debt, and those payments in turn become future debt. If the interest they demand is high enough, the result can be an economic downturn, an upward debt spiral, or both. While politicians pay attention to all kinds of economic indicators, from the unemployment rate to the stock market, the bond market is a different and more powerful animal. The most famous quote about the bond market's power comes from former Bill Clinton adviser James Carville: 'I used to think if there was reincarnation, I wanted to come back as the president or the pope or a .400 baseball hitter. But now I want to come back as the bond market. You can intimidate everybody.' History is littered with cases of governments that were forced to abandon policies — or that even fell from power — because the bond market revolted. Just a few years ago in the UK, a mass sell-off by currency and bond traders forced the Tory government to abandon its plans for a massive deficit-ballooning tax cut and axe Chancellor of the Exchequer Kwasi Kwarteng, before then-Prime Minister Liz Truss herself was forced to resign after just 45 days in office. Banks like Citigroup were openly declaring that unless the UK got a different prime minister, the markets would continue to punish it. That is power. Now, Congress is weighing a reconciliation bill that would increase the deficit by at least $3 trillion over 10 years, and possibly closer to $5 trillion if some of its temporary components become permanent, as seems likely. This is a big increase in America's already substantial debt burden and markets are responding accordingly. Interest rates are heading higher, especially once you adjust for inflation. Countries once infamous for fiscal mismanagement — Greece, Spain, even Italy — can now borrow more cheaply than the United States can. The US is not the UK; the bond market cannot depose a president the way it can a prime minister, simply because prime ministers are far easier to swap out. But that doesn't mean that the bond market is powerless over US policy. It has the ability to make this tax bill much, much more costly for the US government and economy, and that ability could be decisive in shaping where the legislation goes from here. The bond market is mad about the debt The US issues a lot of different kinds of debt, but the kind you should pay closest attention to are 10-year bonds. These reflect the market's views on the medium- to long-run trajectory of the government and economy, whereas 30-day or six-month bonds are much shorter-run indicators. The interest rate that's most informative about government policy and long-run prospects is the 'real' rate, adjusted for inflation. If inflation is 4 percent, investors will probably add about 4 percentage points to the real interest rate to make sure their investment doesn't erode in value. The real rate thus reflects how much they expect to earn for essentially lending money to the US government in addition to just keeping up with overall prices. Here's the 10-year, adjusting for inflation, since the start of President Donald Trump's first term: Interest rates have been rising since 2022 or so. FRED In the aftermath of Covid, rates actually went negative after taking inflation into account. This is what's sometimes called the 'flight to safety': In times of crisis, investors often move away from risky assets like stocks and toward reliable, predictable ones, like US government bonds. That drives interest rates down, sometimes even below inflation. But since 2023 or so, rates have been much higher. There's a saying, popularized by economist Scott Sumner, that one should 'never reason from a price change': Changes in the Treasury interest rate (or the price of borrowing) could be from any number of factors, so it's too simplistic to look at what happened and say 'investors decided the US government became a riskier bet.' The Logoff The email you need to stay informed about Trump — without letting the news take over your life, from senior editor Patrick Reis. Email (required) Sign Up By submitting your email, you agree to our Terms and Privacy Notice . This site is protected by reCAPTCHA and the Google Privacy Policy and Terms of Service apply. That said, when Fed economists analyzed the spike that occurred in 2023, they concluded the spike in rates was indeed due to investors reacting to changing economic conditions: The US was issuing more debt, the Federal Reserve was tightening to try to control inflation, and future economic growth in the US was looking sluggish. Other observers in the bond market have been sounding alarms, mostly citing excessive US borrowing. In 2023, Fitch, one of the three big credit rating agencies that issues risk evaluations of bonds, downgraded US debt, which previously had a perfect AAA rating. On May 16 of this year, Moody's, another of the three, followed suit, amid tax cut negotiations in Congress. Standard & Poor's, the third rater, had already downgraded the US after the 2011 debt ceiling fight, meaning there now isn't a single rating agency giving US debt top marks. As the 2023 downgrade indicates, this change isn't entirely due to Trump. Covid did a number on the US debt picture, with trillions of dollars in relief measures passed and implemented, and many months of lower revenues due to the 2020 recession. But in January, as Trump prepared to return to the White House, bond analysts were already forecasting higher rates, noting his penchant for tax cuts and lack of seriousness about deficits. On May 20, amid the tax fight in Congress, a batch of 20-year government bonds had trouble selling at auction, sending rates flying higher still. The bond market, it is fair to say, is not pleased with the direction this administration is going. High interest rates could hurt…real bad The nominal (that is, not adjusted for inflation) 10-year Treasury rate has grown from lows of around 3.6 percent in September to above 4.4 percent now. That, on its own, might not sound like a lot: only a 0.8-point increase? But if you apply even a small increase in interest costs to the tens of trillions of dollars in debt the US government has outstanding, you get a very big number. Case in point: The Congressional Budget Office, as it evaluates Trump and Republicans' tax and spending proposals, is assuming 10-year interest rates of 4.1 percent this year, falling to 3.8 percent over time. What if, instead, rates stayed higher — at 4.4 percent, say? Even that modest-sounding change would cost the US government $1.8 trillion over the next decade, per the Committee for a Responsible Federal Budget; for scale, that's about what Trump's more extreme tariff plans are projected to bring in. How persistently high interest rates would affect federal interest payments over the next 10 years. Committee for a Responsible Federal Budget A bond market reaction that persistently pushes up rates like this could turn a 'merely' $3.1 trillion bill into a $5 trillion bill, raising the price tag by nearly 60 percent, without a single additional dollar in tax cuts or spending. By 2035, the US would be spending $2.1 trillion a year on interest, more than on defense or on Social Security, or on Medicare — some of the biggest portions of the federal budget. That constrains politicians in both parties quite severely. It makes it harder for Republicans to pass the tax cuts they want, because they now are meaningfully more expensive. Same goes for any deficit-financed spending that Democrats may want. Some politicians might say, 'Who cares? Voters care more about tax cuts than the deficit. Why should it matter to me if some number labeled 'deficit' goes up?' It may be true that voters can't easily parse the difference between a $1 and $2 trillion deficit. But they can definitely tell when things in their daily lives get more expensive, and higher interest costs will make everything more expensive. Thirty-year mortgage interest rates move in almost perfect tandem with long-term government bonds, as this chart from the Bipartisan Policy Center shows: Mortgage interest rates generally track movements in the interest rate on US government bonds. Bipartisan Policy Center This makes sense, if you think about it. When a bank issues a mortgage (or buys one from an issuer), it's lending money on a long-term basis in exchange for regular interest payments. That's exactly what an investor does when they buy a long-term government bond. Because mortgage borrowers (that is, homeowners) are typically considered riskier than the US government, they pay somewhat higher rates, but the two rates move together. If the US government starts paying more interest, mortgage borrowers will have to pay more interest too, so that banks lend to them rather than the federal government. That means that if the bond market sends rates on US debt higher, it's not just more expensive for the government; it's more expensive for anyone who borrows. That means homeowners with mortgages, anyone with credit card debt, anyone with a car loan, anyone taking a student loan, and, perhaps most importantly, businesses taking out loans to build factories or invest in research. Good luck getting a US manufacturing renaissance going with persistently high interest rates driven by high deficits. The odds are still high that Congress passes some kind of deficit-exploding tax bill. The House passed its version by a single vote, and while some Republican senators have voiced complaints, Republicans' 53-vote majority there means they can afford a few defectors and still pass something. Many of the Trump tax cuts passed in 2017 are set to expire next year, and the political urge to avoid a sudden spike in taxes will probably overwhelm whatever pressure the bond market brings to bear. The bond market is powerful, but Republican hatred of taxes may be more powerful. But important Republican policymakers are paying attention. House Budget committee chair Jodey Arrington (R-TX) hinted to Politico's Victoria Guida that he thinks the markets may force more budget cuts than his party is inclined to support, saying, 'If the bond markets don't think we're serious, I'm not sure it will matter what we do, because they're going to dictate the terms.' And senators needed to get the package to the president's desk are watching too. 'Have you been watching what the bond markets are doing in relation to the one big, beautiful bill?' Sen. Ron Johnson (R-WI) asked. 'They're not thinking it's a very big, beautiful bill.'
Yahoo
31 minutes ago
- Yahoo
Tesla Sales Plunge 67% to an Almost Three-Year Low in France
(Bloomberg) -- Tesla Inc.'s new-vehicle registrations fell further in France, undercutting Chief Executive Officer Elon Musk's assertion last month that the carmaker has recovered from its early-year sales slump. Billionaire Steve Cohen Wants NY to Expand Taxpayer-Backed Ferry Where the Wild Children's Museums Are Now With Colorful Blocks, Tirana's Pyramid Represents a Changing Albania The Economic Benefits of Paying Workers to Move NYC Congestion Toll Brings In $216 Million in First Four Months The automaker sold only 721 cars in May, down 67% from a year earlier, according to French industry association Plateforme Automobile. Tesla's registrations were the lowest since July 2022, despite the company rolling out a redesigned version of its most popular vehicle, the Model Y. Tesla shares dropped as much as 2.3% before the start of regular trading Monday. The stock has declined 14% this year. Musk recently denied the need for a plan to improve Tesla's fortunes, telling Bloomberg News in a May 20 interview that the company had 'already turned around.' While the CEO claimed Tesla was seeing sales decline along with every other carmaker in Europe, manufacturers including Volkswagen AG, Renault SA and BMW AG increased deliveries in the first four months of the year. Tesla's sales have fallen 47% through May in the second-biggest market for electric vehicles in the European Union. The Federal Motor Transport Authority in Germany, the EU's largest EV market, is scheduled to release May figures on June 6. YouTube Is Swallowing TV Whole, and It's Coming for the Sitcom Millions of Americans Are Obsessed With This Japanese Barbecue Sauce Mark Zuckerberg Loves MAGA Now. Will MAGA Ever Love Him Back? Will Small Business Owners Knock Down Trump's Mighty Tariffs? Trump Considers Deporting Migrants to Rwanda After the UK Decides Not To ©2025 Bloomberg L.P.


Politico
31 minutes ago
- Politico
Ciattarelli's GOP chair choice
Presented by Good Monday morning! Nothing's official yet, including the Republican nominee for governor, but it's looking like the New Jersey State Republican Party will soon be run by Glenn Paulsen. Ciattarelli late last week indicated to Republican leaders that Paulsen will likely be his choice to run the party if he wins the nomination in June, which looks likely. Party nominees traditionally get to pick the state chair until at least November, though it hasn't always happened that way. Paulsen is a 14-year former Burlington County GOP chair, back when that county, now quite Democratic, was a bastion of Republicanism. He was often called a 'boss,' and he maintained a strong GOP organization along with his protege, the late Bill Layton, but looking back, the Democratic tide of South Jersey suburban Philadelphia seemed inevitable. Another Paulsen mentee, Eric Arpert, is running Ciattarelli's campaign. And Ciattarelli strategist Chris Russell also goes way back with him. Paulsen also played a big role in launching the political career of former state senator and Ciattarelli 2021 lieutenant governor running mate Diane Allen, before they became political enemies. But over the last 20 years or so, Paulsen has largely been out of the spotlight while remaining a behind-the-scenes player. He's make the news occasionally, like when his former law firm Capehart & Scatchard was New Jersey's special counsel to the DRPA. In 2019, he joined the firm Malamut and Associates, which the Burlington County Times noted had strong ties to Burlington County Democrats. But that association ended suddenly during a recent controversy over the leadership of Rowan College at Burlington County, when Paulsen said another employee of the firm told him he was done 'without any explanation, any previous negative employment evaluations or any other explanation.' But as likely as Paulsen looks, Ciattarelli isn't expected to make the choice formal until after the primary, and then it will have to be ratified by the the committee members. I'm told there's no bad blood between Ciattarelli and current GOP Chair Bob Hugin, whom Ciattarelli first named chair four years ago. Other names I've heard floated for the role include Cape May GOP Chair Michael Donohue, Middletown Mayor Tony Perry, Monmouth County Clerk Christine Hanlon and Hunterdon GOP Chair Gabe Plumer. Ciattarelli's chief primary rival, Bill Spadea, responded to the news by saying the pick shows Ciattarelli is a 'slave to the Trenton crowd' and calling Paulsen 'an entrenched political insider who has made his entire career off of taxpayer dollars.' 'I didn't think that Jack's newest choice for chair could be worse than his guy who drove NJGOP into the ditch for the last four years, but he's surprised me again.' Spadea is backed by Ocean County GOP Chair George Gilmore, one of the most powerful Republican insiders in New Jersey. I asked his campaign if he would consider Gilmore for GOP state chair if he wins the position, but his campaign manager Tom Bonfonti told me he doesn't have a shortlist right now because 'our only focus is on the voters and winning this primary.' FEEDBACK? Reach me at mfriedman@ WHERE'S MURPHY — No public schedule QUOTE OF THE DAY: 'There's a law against impersonating a religious belief, and that's exactly what you're doing, Ed Grimes! Your Jeep is outside. I took a picture of your license plate. I will now press charges against you.' — Dover Mayor James Dodd, after activist Ed 'Lefty' Grimes allegedly showed up to a council meeting in a burqa to complain about a smoking ordinance. (I'm not familiar with any laws against impersonating religious belief, and I can't imagine one would be constitutional.) 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Should one of them win, it will create a vacancy and trigger New Jersey's currently long and cumbersome process to replace them. The bill, NJ S3282 (24R), would cut down the time frame to fill House vacancies in some circumstances, but it could still be a particularly long process, depending on when the vacancy occurs. SURGE PRICING — 'Uber spends millions backing Fulop, Sherrill, Ciattarelli in primary,' by New Jersey Globe's Zach Blackburn: 'Uber is spending millions on primary races this summer in a push to end high insurance costs for rideshare companies in New Jersey. The spending is part of an ongoing push from Uber to end the insurance requirements, including a five-figure digital ad campaign earlier this month … 'The cost of rideshare in New Jersey has become too expensive for many, and that is largely due to state-mandated insurance requirements,' Uber spokesperson Freddi Goldstein said in a statement … Uber's PAC, Fair & Affordable New Jersey, gave $1 million to Workers for a Better New Jersey, a super PAC supporting Jersey City Mayor Steve Fulop's campaign for governor. A source close to Uber told the New Jersey Globe the company's PAC sent $500k to Stand Together NJ, a super PAC supporting Democratic Rep. Mikie Sherrill, and another $500k to Kitchen Table Conservatives, a super PAC supporting Republican Jack Ciattarelli.' NURSING A GRUDGE — 'N.J. spends billions on nursing homes. Officials question spending in wake of report,' by NJ Advance Media's Susan K. Livio and Ted Sherman: 'New Jersey spends billions to help fund nursing home care for frail and elderly residents. But state officials are now questioning just how the money is being spent in the wake of a recent series by NJ Advance Media and its sister newsrooms across the country examining the inside financial dealings of the long-term care industry. State Human Services Commissioner Sarah Adelman laid out the stakes in a key budget hearing earlier this month … She pointedly asked whether operators who receive tens of thousands through Medicaid reimbursements for indigent residents should be allowed to profit from those public funds. 'The reality is this is happening' she said, referring to the stories and the findings about the quality and nutrition of food provided in nursing homes, as well as revelations on self-dealing by nursing homes that do business with related companies.' TOO STEAMY — A social media video posted by Steve Fulop on Saturday night chronicled his day on the campaign trail. Set to the tune of Rusted Root's 'Send Me On My Way,' it initially began with G-rated footage of Fulop in the shower at 5:30 a.m., but Fulop deleted it. 'One person said something so I didn't want to deal with a shoulder being exposed,' Fulop told me. You can still see the video, sans shower footage. Fulop is calling it 'Shower Gate.' STREET FIGHT 2 — The race to become New Jersey's next governor is on! This election is crowded, and even less predictable than normal. Let's look at what could happen — pick a Democrat and a Republican to face off, and we'll tell you how it might go. Choose your fighter here — ''Wake-up call': [Wimberly's] car broken into by scooter-riding burglars' — 'Sierra Club endorses Mikie Sherrill for governor' — 'Sweeney pushes healthcare proposal amid Medicaid uncertainty' — JCP&L asks BPU: Should we still be spending hundreds of millions on offshore wind grid? — 'What Makes Jersey Run: What you need to know about N.J.'s hot governor race in easy numbers' — 'Navy pilot. Mom. A different kind of leader: I'm Mikie Sherrill, running for N.J. governor' — 'To fix our state, we need common sense: I'm Jack Ciattarelli, running for N.J. governor' — Sauickie: 'As utility bills bankrupt NJ, Trenton Democrats blame everyone but themselves' TRUMP ERA BOBBING FOR PARDONS — 'Former Democratic Sen. Bob Menendez is still pushing for a Trump pardon before reporting to prison,' by NBC's Kate Santaliz, Julie Tsirkin, Garrett Haake and Carol E. Lee: 'President Donald Trump has not ruled out pardoning or commuting the sentence of former Sen. Bob Menendez, though allies believe there is only a small chance that the New Jersey Democrat will receive clemency before he's scheduled to report to prison next month, according to a White House official and three additional people familiar with the discussions. Menendez allies have made multiple overtures to the White House since Trump took office to request either a pardon or a commutation of his 11-year prison sentence following his conviction on bribery and corruption charges, according to four people familiar with the efforts. After one such overture, some of Menendez's allies were convinced Trump will not grant the New Jersey Democrat clemency, people familiar with the efforts said. But a White House official says Trump has not made a decision on the matter.' — @SenatorMenendez: 'People talk about the Trump DOJ, but it was the Democrats who started weaponizing the Justice Dept. When, as the Chairman of the SFRC, I didn't go along with Obama's Iran deal, I was indicted, and the next day after being stripped of my position, Obama announced the Iran deal.' Community note: 'Former Senator Bob Menendez was convicted of federal corruption charges in July of 2024 after it was found that he and his wife accepted nearly $1 million in cash, gold bars and a luxury car as bribes. He was sentenced to 11 years and is due to report to prison on 6/17/25.' — Chris Christie says Trump is giving free rein to white-collar criminals UNWARRENTED — 'Officials in conservative N.J. county are baffled at their inclusion on 'sanctuary jurisdictions' list,' by New Jersey Globe's Joey Fox: 'When the Department of Homeland Security (DHS) released a list yesterday of 'sanctuary jurisdictions' that it says violate the law to shield undocumented immigrants … two jurisdictions on the list stick out from the rest: Cumberland and Warren Counties. Both counties voted for Donald Trump last year — Warren County did so by more than 20 percentage points — and both have Republican-controlled boards of county commissioners that are hardly sympathetic to sanctuary cities. An official statement from Warren County's government expressed 'surprise' at the designation, citing the anti-sanctuary state bills the county commissioner board has passed in recent years.' SHOOTING THE POOCH — 'A federal list of immigrant 'sanctuaries' nets Trump allies and foes alike,' by The New York Times' Campbell Robertson, Halina Bennet and Jill Cowan: 'Some of the jurisdictions on the list had indeed designated themselves as sanctuary cities in resolutions or executive orders. Officials in other places argued that the phrase 'sanctuary city' did not technically apply, though they had pledged to protect immigrants. But mixed among them were many counties and cities that openly support efforts to apprehend and deport immigrants, or have even been actively cooperating with Immigration and Customs Enforcement. Officials in other places that had voted overwhelmingly for President Trump but were far from the front lines of the immigration debate were simply bewildered.' HOTLINE KING — 'Trump will hold a tele-rally for Ciattarelli on Monday night,' by New Jersey Globe's David Wildstein: 'President Donald Trump will host a tele-rally for Republican gubernatorial candidate Jack Ciattarelli on Monday evening at 7 PM, the New Jersey Globe has learned. Trump's virtual appearance for Ciattarelli comes eleven hours before the polls open for a week of in-person early voting … The president's endorsement of Ciattarelli, a onetime critic, came on May 12, making the former three-term assemblyman the clear front-runner in the race for the Republican gubernatorial nomination.' — 'NJ nun tweeted at Trump every day in first term. Why she's changed her tune this time' — Murphy shows up in Smith's district to push back Medicaid cuts LOCAL ROSELLE PARK — 'Is cancer a coincidence? This N.J. town has a 30-year-old toxic waste problem that workers say is killing them,' by NJ Advance Media's Jackie Roman: 'Harry Uhrig's first two years of retirement from the Roselle Park Department of Public Works have been spent shuffling between doctors appointments. The 60-year-old doesn't drink or smoke. He always considered himself relatively healthy, until he was diagnosed with Parkinson's disease in 2022 and kidney failure in January of this year. That's why he wonders if his two decades of working at the borough's public works yard — one of more than 12,000 contaminated sites in New Jersey — had something to do with it … Dirty fill dirt used decades ago and old, leaking underground fuel storage tanks have contaminated the soil and groundwater, state records show. Volatile organic compounds like benzene and toxic heavy metals like arsenic, lead and manganese have been detected, according to remediation documents and a fact sheet from the state Department of Environmental Protection. Despite efforts by the town and the state to remove contaminated soil and conduct regular monitoring, current and former employees — some who've become sick, and the family of one who died of cancer five years ago — say not enough is being done. They claim that more than a half dozen former public works employees have died from different types of cancer between 2017 and 2024.' SUBWAY CRIME — 'Prospect Park councilman facing illegal gambling charges released from jail,' by The Record's Philip DeVencentis: 'The councilman who allegedly helped to orchestrate an underground gambling ring has been released from jail after a judge reconsidered a decision that kept him there for a month and a half. Borough Council President Anand Shah, 42, was allowed to walk out of Morris County Correctional Facility in Morristown on May 30, pending 11 charges of illegal gambling, money laundering and racketeering for his alleged link to the complex scheme. Michael DeMarco, an attorney for Shah, said his client will remain on home confinement, except for professional appointments and to go to work as a Subway franchisee.' FREE PARKING — 'Hoboken mayor accused of parking ticket fixing scheme, he denies any wrongdoing,' by Hudson County View's John Heinis: 'Hoboken Mayor Ravi Bhalla is accused of fixing several of his parking tickets through municipal employees, according to a letter from a former assistant municipal public defender and current assistant Hudson County counsel, and he denies any wrongdoing. '...The mayor 'gets tickets' and hands them to enforcement officers saying, 'take care of this.' I reviewed publicly available records on which revealed ~247 municipal court cases listing Mayor Bhalla as the defendant,' wrote attorney Georgina Giordano Pallitto, who told HCV she was not releasing her client's name due to an ongoing investigation.' R.I.P. — 'Hudson County sheriff's officer dies after falling through window in Jersey City, prosecutor's office says,' by CBS2's Doug Williams and Lori Bordonaro: 'A Hudson County sheriff's officer died Friday after falling through a window at an administrative building in Jersey City. The circumstances Officer Justin Rivera's fall appeared to be accidental, the Hudson County Prosecutor's office said. Rivera, 29, fell from a ninth floor window around 9:30 a.m. Friday at the Hudson County Administration Building on Newark Avenue, the prosecutor's office said. He was taken to Jersey City Medical Center, where he was pronounced dead a short time later.' — 'NJ bill would cut Lacey officials out of future nuclear reactor decisions' — 'Democrats to square off in Wayne primary for chance to challenge mayor' — 'Monroe police officers hailed for bravery, professionalism during mental health crisis' — 'Hundreds support LGBTQ+ community on Ocean City Boardwalk ahead of Pride Month' — '[Jackson] school named for late Challenger teacher-astronaut is closing' EVERYTHING ELSE R.I.P. — 'Former NYPD commissioner Bernard Kerik, a Paterson native, dies at 69,' by The Record's John Connolly: 'Former NYPD commissioner Bernard Kerik, a Paterson native, died at the age of 69 on May 29 'after a private battle with illness,' announced FBI Director Kash Patel. Kerik, a former Passaic County undersheriff, was New York City's top cop in the wake of terrorist attacks on Sept. 11, 2001. He later served time in prison for tax evasion and other charges.' TESLA FOIL — 'Tesla Superchargers to be removed from New Jersey Turnpike,' by NJ Advance Media's Stephanie Loder: 'The New Jersey Turnpike Authority has decided to part ways with Tesla, ordering 64 Supercharges to be removed from the super highway connecting northern and southern New Jersey. The authority has decided to use a sole third-party provider for its electric vehicle charging, which is why it didn't renew a contract to keep Tesla Superchargers on the toll road, Tesla said on social media on Friday. 'We have been preparing for three years for this potential outcome by building 116 stalls off the New Jersey Turnpike, ensuring no interruption for our customers,' the Tesla statement said.' DOES 'GOOD DOG, CARL' WORK FOR THE PORT AUTHORITY POLICE? — 'Cops rescue toddler from luggage conveyor belt at Newark airport,' by NJ Advance Media's Stephanie Loder: 'Port Authority police are credited with rescuing a 2-year-old child last week who climbed onto a luggage conveyor belt headed to an X-ray machine at Newark Liberty International Airport. Port Authority police officers assigned to Terminal A were alerted to the incident involving a child at 6:28 p.m. on Wednesday, an official said. The incident happened while the child's mother was at the JetBlue ticketing counter on the departures level … The child, who was not injured, was located in the checked baggage room on the lower level, the Port Authority said.' — 'Black bear sightings in New Jersey are down in 2025. A breakdown by the numbers' — Doblin: 'In 2025, as chaos and hate swirl, we need Pride now more than ever'