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NJ law would let towns, counties, and school districts withdraw from civil service system

  • Shore News Network
  • November 21, 2025
  • 4:05 pm
NJ law would let towns counties and school districts withdraw from civil service system

Trenton, NJ – A new proposal in the New Jersey Assembly would allow municipalities, counties, school districts, and other local government entities to opt out of the state’s civil service system.

Assembly Bill 6048, introduced by Assemblyman David Bailey, Jr. (D–Cumberland, Gloucester, and Salem), would give local governing bodies the authority to rescind their prior adoption of Title 11A, Civil Service, which governs merit-based hiring and employment protections for public workers.

Under current law, once a municipality or county adopts civil service, withdrawing from the system is extremely difficult and not explicitly permitted. Bailey’s bill would create a formal process for rescission through a local ordinance, resolution, or referendum, depending on the governing body’s structure.


How the opt-out process would work

  • A local government operating under Title 11A could vote by ordinance, resolution, or referendum to rescind its participation.
  • The action would become effective six months after final adoption and must be certified to both the Secretary of State and the Civil Service Commission.
  • If a rescission proposal fails, the governing body must wait at least five years before voting again on the issue.
  • Any jurisdiction that does withdraw could not readopt civil service for at least five years—and may only do so once thereafter.

Protections for current employees

The bill preserves job protections for existing civil service employees.

  • Workers employed before the effective date of withdrawal would retain their current tenure, benefits, and civil service protections.
  • Employees hired after the effective date would not be covered under civil service rules.

This two-tiered approach aims to respect existing employee rights while giving local governments greater flexibility in future hiring and personnel management.


Next steps

The New Jersey Civil Service Commission would be required to adopt regulations under the Administrative Procedure Act to implement the bill’s provisions.

If enacted, the measure would take effect immediately, marking a significant shift in how local governments manage their workforces and potentially reshaping the balance between statewide employment standards and local control.


Key Points

  • Allows local governments, counties, and school districts to withdraw from civil service by local vote.
  • Current employees remain protected; future hires would not fall under civil service rules.
  • Five-year waiting period before any re-adoption, which may occur only once.
  • Takes effect immediately upon enactment.

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