Want access to post press releases? To sign up, use this form. You must be logged in.
(TRENTON) - The General Assembly today passed a seven-bill package sponsored by Assemblymen Patrick J. Diegnan, Joseph Vas, Matthew W. Milam, Nelson T. Albano and Wayne P. DeAngelo to simplify many of New Jersey's corporate governance statutes and make the state more attractive to businesses.
"For New Jersey to be competitive as a home for industry in the global marketplace, we need laws that will allow them to operate in real time, using 21st century technology," said Diegnan (D-Middlesex). "By making the state more business friendly, we can actively combat the national economic recession, and begin to reverse New Jersey's pervasive stigma as state hostile to business."
According to the sponsors, the proposed changes in New Jersey's corporate business laws stem largely from recent conversations they had with business leaders and from a desire to be more cognizant of how corporations work and operate in the instant-access global marketplace. The sponsors also studied policies in neighboring states - particularly Delaware, which is widely regarded as being very accepting when it comes to corporate governance. Portions of the package mirror Delaware's General Corporation Laws; portions go even further.
"Making these changes will help reignite the engines of private commerce in the Garden State," said Vas (D-Middlesex), chairman of the Assembly Commerce and Economic Development Committee. "And that, in turn, will stimulate the economy, boost private sector job growth, and help reverse the state's reputation as being business unfriendly."
If enacted into law, the Diegnan/Vas/Milam/Albano/DeAngelo initiative would:
"With increasing turbulence in our national economy, we must do everything we can to ensure that New Jersey remains an excellent place to do business," said Milam (D-Cumberland/Atlantic/Cape May). "In the current competitive marketplace, simply relying on our proximity to New York and Philadelphia is no longer enough."
"This package will send a message that we are serious about working with the businesses that choose to call New Jersey home," said Albano (D-Cumberland/Atlantic/Cape May). "If they choose to make a good-faith effort to become partners in our economic future, they should not have to put up with archaic and outdated laws to do so."
"These changes will help bring new jobs and new opportunities to the state," said DeAngelo (D-Mercer/Middlesex). "With a full-blown recession looming on the horizon, working to bolster and protect the state's private sector now only makes sense."
The measures all were passed by unanimous vote. They now head to the Senate for further consideration.
--30--
Citizens for Responsibility and Ethics in Washington (CREW), a watchdog group that promotes ethics and accountability, has filed a complaint with the ... >
There's nothing more difficult to see than the history before your eyes. It sometimes takes generations to understand the significance of ... >
OK, he didn't say precisely that, but when the Chairman of the Budget Committee informs us that governmental spending is the key to prosperity, ... >
Score one for the Governor’s public relations team. For the last few weeks, they have been working overtime to fuel speculation Corzine was being ... >
I am pleased to report the results from the first national poll conducted by Environmental Studies Program in the College of Arts and Sciences at ... >
To view a larger version of this cartoon, click here. >
The media, which loves headlines and knows little history, is trying to sell President Elect Obama as another Franklin Delano Roosevelt. But that ... >
When I was eleven, way back in 1965, my family was invited for Thanksgiving to my cousins’ cousins, a Jewish-Italian family who lived in the ... >
After the entire Star-Ledger editorial board opted to accept the paper's buyout offer, John Farmer, a 26-year veteran of the paper, was tasked ... >
A couple of weeks ago, my mother, Angelina Katz, did her second debate on behalf of Barack Obama. A debate? My mother? If you knew her, you’d be ... >
A rained out MusicFest this past September has provided Union County with $275,000 in insurance monies. The Union County Board of Chosen Freeholders ... >
Today the Asinine Watch begins. With so many illiterate statements made about the economy by elected officials in recent days and weeks, it was ... >
Comments