- Home
- County News
- Camden County Furlough Schedule
Camden County Furlough Schedule
The Camden County Freeholder Board, as part of its ongoing effort to increase cost savings in preparing this year’s budget and anticipating an even tougher year in 2011, is furloughing 750 employees without pay for 4 days in 2010.
The following Camden County Departments will be closed on the following dates:
Administration – July 2, August 13, October 8, November 19
County Clerk – July 2, August 13, September 10, November 19
Parks Department – August 27, September 10, October 22, November 19
Superintendent of Elections – July 2, July 30, August 27, November 19
Surrogate’s Office – July 2, August 20, September 17, October 29
“In these tough economic times, we need to embrace the best strategies and tactics to protect taxpayers. While our plan demands sacrifice from our workforce and from elected officials, who will also lose pay, we believe that this is the fairest solution to the budget crisis,” Deputy Freeholder Director Ed McDonnell.
“We will continue to look at best practices and consolidation in order to cut the cost and size of government, as we have promised to do in our Transformation Initiative and other programs,” said Camden County Freeholder Director Louis Cappelli, Jr. “In each of the past three years, we have cut the amount of money taxpayers pay for county government. Since 2004, we have downsized the workforce by over 600 employees without impacting services to residents.”
The following Camden County Departments will be closed on the following dates:
Administration – July 2, August 13, October 8, November 19
County Clerk – July 2, August 13, September 10, November 19
Parks Department – August 27, September 10, October 22, November 19
Superintendent of Elections – July 2, July 30, August 27, November 19
Surrogate’s Office – July 2, August 20, September 17, October 29
“In these tough economic times, we need to embrace the best strategies and tactics to protect taxpayers. While our plan demands sacrifice from our workforce and from elected officials, who will also lose pay, we believe that this is the fairest solution to the budget crisis,” Deputy Freeholder Director Ed McDonnell.
“We will continue to look at best practices and consolidation in order to cut the cost and size of government, as we have promised to do in our Transformation Initiative and other programs,” said Camden County Freeholder Director Louis Cappelli, Jr. “In each of the past three years, we have cut the amount of money taxpayers pay for county government. Since 2004, we have downsized the workforce by over 600 employees without impacting services to residents.”


