Hester to win as freeholders change mind
Will
vote to extend benefits Wednesday
BY
DON BENNETT, Ocean County Observer, January 21, 2006
TOMS RIVER —
Reversing themselves after months of battering at public
meetings and in the press, Ocean County's freeholders are
scheduled to vote Wednesday to extend pension benefits to the
domestic partner of Lt. Laurel Hester and other members of the
Police and Fire Retirement System.
The decision came after a political teleconference among the
Republican leaders of the county yesterday afternoon.
The agreement that emerged calls for the freeholders to vote
Wednesday, after a closed-door meeting that is a routine part of
their caucuses, to extend the pension benefits to Hester and her
partner, Stacie Andree.
In addition, state Sen. Andrew Ciesla, R-Ocean, has asked the
state Office of Legislative Services to prepare a bill he will
sponsor that will eliminate the difference in the pension
inheritance rights of members of the police and fire retirement
system and other state public employee retirement systems.
If it is enacted, members of the police and fire retirement
system will be able to leave their pension benefits to whomever
they select, as is now the case with the other public employee
pension systems.
Freeholder James F. Lacey of Brick confirmed the agreement
reached at yesterday's teleconference that included the
political hierarchy of the county.
"I think we're doing the right thing now. I feel
comfortable," he said.
He said he still feels the Legislature should have fixed the
differences in the pension systems, saying "I don't want to pay
to clean up for the state."
But he said Hester, whose physical condition has deteriorated
before the eyes of the freeholders as the debate raged, needs
action now, he said.
That is the reason the freeholders will discuss what to do
Wednesday and vote to let the 49-year-old detective's partner,
Andree, inherit her pension.
Hester said without the pension Andree would be unable to keep
the home they share in Point Pleasant when she is gone.
"This poor woman may not have time," to wait for the Legislature
to act, Lacey said.
There is no assurance that will come quickly, said Ciesla, who
took part in yesterday's political discussion.
"I think it will pass," he said, but said it will need support
from Democrats.
"We're not in charge," the Republican lawmaker said, referring
to the party's minority status in both the Senate and Assembly.
Hester gave "a greater urgency to the matter," and that is why
the freeholders agreed to act, Ciesla said.
Freeholder John P. Kelly declined to discuss what happened
during the teleconference, saying the leaders involved agreed to
keep it confidential.
"The freeholders and the administrative staff have been looking
at all the issues in the Domestic Partnership Act," Kelly said.
He has been the target of the most vocal criticism from those
urging the freeholders to extend the benefits to Hester and
other county law enforcement employees because he claimed early
on that the Domestic Partnership Act "circumvented the marriage
law."
That spurred demonstrations where the freeholders were accused
of homophobia and discrimination, the most recent of them
Wednesday evening.
There were threats of a boycott of the tourism industry in the
county, lawsuits, and political retribution.
Kelly said he believes changes in the pension law are needed to
make it unnecessary for the freeholders to be concerned with the
personal lifestyles of employees.
"The law has to be inclusive, not exclusive," he said.
"The freeholders want to give this lady's companion the benefits
that others get," said Sen. Leonard T. Connors, R-Ocean, the
senior senator in the county, and a former freeholder.
"They wanted to discuss this," he said of the party leaders.
"I was asked to join and made the phone call," he said.
His son, Assemblyman Christopher Connors, also R-Ocean, did,
too, he said.
"I'm hoping when the legislation is put in it will move ahead,"
Lacey said.
Freeholders Joseph H. Vicari, John C. Bartlett Jr., and Director
Gerry P. Little did not return calls seeking comment on
yesterday's political summit.
|