MATT KATZ
The Philadelphia Inquirer
TRENTON - Gov. Christie will travel to Camden County to meet with mayors and to lobby for creation of the first countywide police and fire departments in New Jersey, Freeholder Director Louis Cappelli Jr. said Thursday.
Cappelli attended a closed-door meeting Thursday with Christie and elected officials from Camden, Trenton, and Newark - all of which have pursued or threatened police layoffs in recent weeks - to discuss public safety.
Christie summoned the leaders to Trenton, but would not comment afterward except to say it was a "good meeting." His office would not confirm that Christie would come to Camden County to meet with mayors to support such an idea.
In brief remarks beforehand, the governor described the gathering as one in a series of discussions he has had with mayors of the three cities "to get ourselves through these difficult times."
"We want to be helpful in any way we can," Christie said, flanked by Camden Mayor Dana L. Redd and Newark Mayor Cory Booker. "We want to work together to try to come up with a way of providing for public safety in these cities, and for other essential services . . . and it's going to be a collaborative effort."
One idea for providing public safety while possibly saving money has emerged out of Camden County in recent weeks: Forming a regionalized police force in which towns could close their departments and opt in. A meeting was held Tuesday with county mayors, who appear open to the idea but concerned that the suburbs could end up subsidizing crime-fighting in Camden.
If the governor comes out publicly for such an idea, as State Senate President Stephen Sweeney (D., Gloucester) has, it could lead to the formation of county forces not just in Camden County but statewide as well.
"The governor expressed his full support to create county police and fire departments," Cappelli said after emerging from the meeting at the Statehouse. "He's looking for Camden County to be a leader in that, and he will lend us his support."
No date has been set for Christie's discussion with the Camden County mayors, said Cappelli, who introduced the county regionalization plan last month.
Cappelli attended the meeting with Camden County Sheriff Charles Billingham, who vowed that he would not be the chief of such a county department. The Sheriff's Office in Camden County assists municipal agencies, transports prisoners to the county jail, and handles security at the county courthouse.
Redd said that she had not decided whether she wanted the city police to be disbanded if such a plan were implemented, but wanted to review any "blueprint" for a county force.
"I have a responsibility to look at all possible solutions for increasing public-safety options for residents in Camden," she said after the session with the governor. "Meanwhile, I'm waiting for the unions' concessions."
Redd has been in on-and-off negotiations with police and fire union leaders to find contractual concessions after extraordinary layoffs last month, in which 67 firefighters and more than 160 police officers lost their jobs.
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February 4, 2011