First thread I've ever started, hope the link works......some more "love" for the program
He’s in WashingtonI swear nobody in Trenton went to a Division 1-A university.
The only solution to this issue is to get more Rutgers alumni in the statehouse. Pascrell is a Fordham grad, so he doesn’t have a clue about big time football. Sargent is an investigative journalist now, so I guess that‘s what his investigations will focus on.
I skimmed through the article. The headline is obvious click bait. The there are two separate issues. One is the issue that the headline invents. NJ tax payers contribute very little to what GS makes. We have been down this road 100 times. People continue to assume that state colleges are 100% tax payer funded like public high schools. They are not. Football is a revenue sport. The premise of the argument is wrong and every time it is brought up key facts are omitted.
The second issue, and the one that is fair to discuss, is whether colleges get too many advantages in the tax code. If the letter was sent to 50 schools and Rutgers only got one because the congressman had to include his home state on the list… I don’t have a horse in that race, but it centers a lot more around endowments then it does football. Unfortunately, NJ.com rarely passes on a chance to take a swipe at RU so we get the lazy headline and the typical rambling train wreck of an article filled with disconnected pieces of information.
Yes the article reads likeThe writer mentions that the other schools pay their coaches at least twice as much. That sends the message "Pascrell is out of his mind by including Rutgers."
Lol !The only solution to this issue is to get more Rutgers alumni in the statehouse. Pascrell is a Fordham grad, so he doesn’t have a clue about big time football. Sargent is an investigative journalist now, so I guess that‘s what his investigations will focus on.
Rutgers does not have a big endowment compared to other public schools. Moreover, as a public school, it does not need to pay taxes. So it makes absolutely no sense for Pascrell to raise Rutgers if he is concerned with the tax treatment of endowments.I skimmed through the article. The headline is obvious click bait. The there are two separate issues. One is the issue that the headline invents. NJ tax payers contribute very little to what GS makes. We have been down this road 100 times. People continue to assume that state colleges are 100% tax payer funded like public high schools. They are not. Football is a revenue sport. The premise of the argument is wrong and every time it is brought up key facts are omitted.
The second issue, and the one that is fair to discuss, is whether colleges get too many advantages in the tax code. If the letter was sent to 50 schools and Rutgers only got one because the congressman had to include his home state on the list… I don’t have a horse in that race, but it centers a lot more around endowments then it does football. Unfortunately, NJ.com rarely passes on a chance to take a swipe at RU so we get the lazy headline and the typical rambling train wreck of an article filled with disconnected pieces of information.
Well said Rt18.First thread I've ever started, hope the link works......some more "love" for the program
article. The headline is obvious click bait. The there are two separate issues. One is the issue that the headline invents. NJ tax payers contribute very little to what GS makes. We have been down this road 100 times. People continue to assume that state colleges are 100% tax payer funded like public high schools. They are not. Football is a revenue sport. The premise of the argument is wrong and every time it is brought up key facts are omitted.
The second issue, and the one that is fair to discuss, is whether colleges get too many advantages in the tax code. If the letter was sent to 50 schools and Rutgers only got one because the congressman had to include his home state on the list… I don’t have a horse in that race, but it centers a lot more around endowments then it does football. Unfortunately, NJ.com rarely passes on a chance to take a swipe at RU so we get the lazy headline and the typical rambling train wreck of an article filled with disconnected pieces of information.
New Jersey has dropped funding to 18.8% of the budget. Athletic spending has dropped to 2.8% of the overall budget. Mostly due to increased spending throughout the University and Athletic spending not keeping up with that increase. (It was just over 3%) Also the State only allocates about $15k to Rutgers Athletics.Well said Rt18.
In regards to the first issue:
1) In general, the State of New Jersey contributes approximately 25% to the annual revenue budget of Rutgers University . 75% of the University's revenue comes from other sources.
2) Athletics expenditures are less than 3% of the total budget. Those with higher analytical skills than I can determine what % of the athletics the State is paying for. Less than 1%???
The next time your brainwashed neighbor who believes that the State is paying for 100% of the athletic budget says he's tired of paying for Rutgers athletics please enlighten him.
3 ) New Jersey ranks 33rd out of 50 states in per capita spending on higher education and 42nd when funding for higher education is measured against personal income. Maybe Kratch and his pal should ask Pascrell to justify those embarrassing facts.
.
Is this list of communities before or after the new redistricting of Congressional seats? That redistricting made almost all incumbents (of both parties) safer.9th District Residents:
Pascrell Contact
Look, it's great to debate this on TKR, but it'll mean more for constituents to write the misguided fool.
Oh, and 9th District:
Bergen County (27):Carlstadt, Cliffside Park, Cresskill, East Rutherford, Edgewater, Elmwood Park, Englewood, Englewood Cliffs, Fort Lee, Garfield, Hasbrouck Heights, Leonia, Little Ferry, Lyndhurst, Moonachie, North Arlington, Palisades Park, Ridgefield, Ridgefield Park, Rutherford, Saddle Brook, South Hackensack, Teaneck (part), Tenafly, Teterboro, Wallington and Wood-Ridge
Hudson County (2):
Kearny (part), Secaucus
Passaic County (6):
Clifton, Haledon, Hawthorne, Passaic, Paterson and Prospect Park
Is this list of communities before or after the new redistricting of Congressional seats? That redistricting made almost all incumbents (of both parties) safer.
I don’t click on these nj.com threads. 32m would make him by far highest paid ncaa coach. I believe he’s like 40th overall and bottom quarter of big 10.
And that we have nickels to give in financial aid to New Jersey students. Meanwhile, NJ kids with decent grades can go to out of state public universities for the same price as Rutgers. Nephew goes to Florida for the same price as Rutgers. University of Louisville is at the New Jersey college fairs and offer this program to kids in all 21 New Jersey counties—The only argument here is not about RU sports or how much is spent on it but that NJ has the 4th highest charges for tuition and fees for in -state residents . That should not be .
It was less expensive for my younger daughter to go to Florida state than rutgers due to money they gave her; roughly $15K per year less.And that we have nickels to give in financial aid to New Jersey students. Meanwhile, NJ kids with decent grades can go to out of state public universities for the same price as Rutgers. Nephew goes to Florida for the same price as Rutgers. University of Louisville is at the New Jersey college fairs and offer this program to kids in all 21 New Jersey counties—
That is just nuts when you think about it. I have run into several people at Rutgers games over the years whose kids wanted to go to Rutgers, but Ohio State was significantly cheaper.It was less expensive for my younger daughter to go to Florida state than rutgers due to money they gave her; roughly $15K per year less.
She qualified for in state tuition which knocked $18K off and then she got 5-7 per year additional money.That is just nuts when you think about it. I have run into several people at Rutgers games over the years whose kids wanted to go to Rutgers, but Ohio State was significantly cheaper.
I voted for the guy.9th District Residents:
Pascrell Contact
Look, it's great to debate this on TKR, but it'll mean more for constituents to write the misguided fool.
Oh, and 9th District:
Bergen County (27):Carlstadt, Cliffside Park, Cresskill, East Rutherford, Edgewater, Elmwood Park, Englewood, Englewood Cliffs, Fort Lee, Garfield, Hasbrouck Heights, Leonia, Little Ferry, Lyndhurst, Moonachie, North Arlington, Palisades Park, Ridgefield, Ridgefield Park, Rutherford, Saddle Brook, South Hackensack, Teaneck (part), Tenafly, Teterboro, Wallington and Wood-Ridge
Hudson County (2):
Kearny (part), Secaucus
Passaic County (6):
Clifton, Haledon, Hawthorne, Passaic, Paterson and Prospect Park
Which school has a nicer campus, Florida State, FAU, or FIU. One of my sisters graduated from Florida State in 1857 lol Probably has changed a bit.She qualified for in state tuition which knocked $18K off and then she got 5-7 per year additional money.
She also could have gone to FAU for less than $5K per year. Neither she nor I liked the school when we toured.
1857? That should put you over 150 yrs old. Lol.Which school has a nicer campus, Florida State, FAU, or FIU. One of my sisters graduated from Florida State in 1857 lol Probably has changed a bit.
I'll never understand how the tuition at Rutgers has been allowed to increase so dramatically over the years.The only argument here is not about RU sports or how much is spent on it but that NJ has the 4th highest charges for tuition and fees for in -state residents . That should not be .
Less than that, if in fact any goes to him. Not sure where the numbers stand now, but the AD as a whole was running in the red, but the football program was net positive at one point.Someone out there has more details than me, but here goes—
There are NINE MILLION people in New Jersey. After you deduct donations, TV revenue, ticket revenue, food and merchandise revenue, parking, advertising income, how much money from each New Jerseyan is going to Schiano each year? Maybe ten cents ?
That makes sense. It sounds like they made the neighboring district safer without compromising the safeness of Pascrell's. He won with 69% last time -- it's hard to believe he can be beaten with the new lines, even if the November elections are as bad for Democrats as currently projected.Not really, at least in North Jersey. Pascrell's district was so overwhelmingly Democratic they switched a few solidly Democratic towns over to the 5th to make that a safe Democratic seat as opposed to a purple district.