We paid $405M in tickets last year; see where the money went

May 10, 2016

Marc Pfeiffer, Rutgers University’s Bloustein School Local Government Research Center senior policy fellow and assistant director, said that he believed ticket surcharges were the most convenient way to finance these funds.

“The legislature has a lot of options available to it, if there is a noble purpose that they want to fulfill. They’re going to want to look for the least objectionable way to fund it,” he said. “You have a tax-like (surcharge) on tickets that doesn’t affect any real specific group of taxpayers, that’s not a general tax. It is a convenient way to go.”

NJ.com, May 10

Recent Posts

NJ Postsecondary Employment and Earnings Dashboard Now Available

The New Jersey Statewide Data System is pleased to release its updated Postsecondary Employment and Earnings Dashboard. This dashboard uses linked, longitudinal administrative data from the Office of the Secretary of Higher Education and the New Jersey Department of...

Rutgers MHA ranked #26 in 2026 by U.S. News and World Report

The Rutgers Master of Health Administration program (MHA) program has been ranked #26 in the nation in the 2026 U.S. News & World Report rankings, climbing two spots from last year and continuing a steady rise from #32 in 2024 and #28 in 2025. “We are incredibly...

Chen et al. Use Google Street View to Verify Cannabis Retailers

Evaluating the Use of Google Street View to Visually Verify the Locations of Cannabis Retailers in the United States Extracted from Websites, 2015–2018 Abstract Our ability to advance public health and policy responses to cannabis legalization is limited by a lack of...

“Work Trends RU” Podcast with Steve Reynolds

Steve Reynolds of Independent Colleges and Universities of New Jersey Guests on Work Trends RU Podcast In the latest episode of Work Trends RU, host Dr. Carl Van Horn speaks with Steve Reynolds, president and CEO of Independent Colleges and Universities of New...