A total of $350 million was set aside in the budget for the 2021 fiscal year to fund the bond issue’s principal and interest payments, Sciortino said. The first interest payment will be $86 million, and the balance of the funds that were budgeted for both principal and interest will “either be used to cover other deficit balances elsewhere in the budget or lapsed back into the general fund at the end of FY21,” she said.
This isn’t the first time that Bank of America has received a major payday from New Jersey taxpayers. In 2017, the bank’s Merrill Lynch division was paid nearly $34 million in consulting fees for work on a complicated transaction that turned the state Lottery into an asset of the state’s public-employee pension system. Roughly $1 billion in annual Lottery revenues is now dedicated to funding worker pensions as a result of the transaction and legislation enacted by former Republican Gov. Chris Christie that authorized it.
No public bank in NJ
While running for governor in 2017, Murphy, a former Goldman Sachs executive, repeatedly called for the establishment of a public bank in New Jersey. That thrilled public-banking advocates who’ve argued big institutional banks don’t serve the public’s interest, though they hold significant taxpayer deposits and handle lucrative government transactions.
Murphy signed an executive order in 2019 that created an implementation board for the proposed public bank, calling it a “first step toward ensuring that our taxpayer dollars are invested here in New Jersey.” But the initiative has remained largely stalled amid the ongoing pandemic.