logo
Mayor Bass said her office's budget will be cut. The numbers tell a different story

Mayor Bass said her office's budget will be cut. The numbers tell a different story

When Mayor Karen Bass spoke about budget cuts during her State of the City address — before she even mentioned laying off city employees — she made clear that her own office would not be spared.
It seemed like a solidarity-building pledge — like a captain going down with the ship.
'We reduced funding for the mayor's office,' she said in the April 21 speech.
This is my third week covering City Hall for The Times. It's my first budget season (my colleague David Zahniser has been covering L.A. city budgets since I was 6), and it's a doozy. The city is facing a $1-billion shortfall caused in large part by rising personnel costs, soaring legal payouts and a slowdown in the local economy.
When I heard the mayor's words, I made a reasonable assumption — that the operating budget for her office would decrease from the year before.
I was incorrect.
When the mayor released her proposed budget later that day, I turned to the section for her office, only to find, to my confusion, that it had grown — from $10.1 million in fiscal year 2024-2025 to $10.7 million in 2025-2026. The office was also spared from having to lay off a single member of its 94-person team, even while Bass was proposing 1,650 layoffs elsewhere in city government.
So by what logic could the mayor's office still have reduced its funding?
Zach Seidl, deputy mayor of communications, said the city administrative officer's recalculation of the coming fiscal year's budget actually showed a $1.2-million decrease. Employees in the mayor's office are not getting regularly scheduled cost-of-living raises. The first, coming in June, would have been a 4% increase. The next, in December, would have been another 2% increase. And the final one in June 2026 would have been another 4%.
Seidl said that while the proposed budget for the mayor's office is higher than last year, it is reduced from where it could have been if the raises had gone into effect. He called this a 10% cut to the office.
Some outside of the mayor's office were less convinced by the what-goes-up-has-gone-down explanation.
Roy Samaan, an L.A. city planner and president of the Board of Governors of the Engineers and Architects Assn., said that when he heard the mayor say she would reduce funding for her own office, he thought it was only fair. The City Planning Department where he works saw its proposed operating budget slashed from nearly $72 million this fiscal year to just under $56.5 million next year.
'I thought in the spirit of shared sacrifice that [cutting the mayor's office] made sense,' he said.
But he was frustrated when he looked at the numbers.
'I'm sure in the long run, through their budget calculations, they can show that an increase is actually a decrease. ... But I know our members in the Planning Department and throughout the city that are slated to be eliminated have noticed the increase in the mayor's office budget, and it strikes them as hypocritical, frankly.'
In the mayor's proposed budget, the City Council's operating budget went up, from $37.2 million to $39.3 million, while the council took a $4.7-million 'one-time salary reduction.'
'The manner in which the elected offices manage their funding reductions is at their discretion,' said Matt Szabo, the city administrative officer.
Council President Marqueece Harris-Dawson said the council is exploring options to achieve budget reductions.
'All options are on the table. The whole city is being asked to sacrifice, this includes the council as well,' he said in a statement to The Times.
The City Council's budget committee is holding several weeks of hearings, with the full council voting on the final budget by June 1.
Bass has said she would take a pay cut herself, answering 'absolutely' when a constituent asked if she would do so.
'The mayor is also taking a personal cut to her paycheck,' Seidl confirmed to The Times. He did not specify the amount.
— DEBRIS-BE-GONE: The mayor said Friday that the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers has now cleared more than 1,000 properties of the debris left from the Palisades fire. 'Our recovery effort is on track to be the fastest in modern California history,' she said. Nearly 650,000 tons of debris have been removed from the Palisades fire zone, and about 55 properties are being cleared per day, according to her office.
ANEMIC RECALL FUNDRAISING: The latest fundraising numbers are in, and the campaign to recall the mayor had a little less than $500,000 in hand at the end of March, after expenses. Nicole Shanahan put in $500,000 and conservative gubernatorial candidate Steve Hilton contributed $25,000. Meanwhile, Bass' anti-recall committee collected $250,000 from the Bass-affiliated Sea Change PAC and $200,000 from former Assembly Speaker and Actum managing partner Fabian Núñez's leftover campaign cash.
— STRIKE FORCE: Tens of thousands of Los Angeles County workers represented by Service Employees International Union Local 721 walked off the job this week at libraries, parks, health clinics and other government facilities. Union members want the county to fill vacant positions and say they've been insulted by the pay proposals offered by county negotiators. The 48-hour strike ended Wednesday.
— GIMME SHELTER: Animal rescue advocates have been up in arms over the mayor's proposed budget for the Animal Services Department, voicing alarm at the potential for layoffs and shelter closures. As it turns out, the money to avoid those cuts was in the budget all along.
— POLICE PLANNING: Los Angeles Police Department Chief Jim McDonnell is contemplating an organizational overhaul of his department — and relying on the think tank RAND for guidance. But his efforts may be complicated by the mayor's proposal to lay off 400 civilian staffers at the department, a move that could force police officers to take on desk jobs and other non-patrol duties.
— WORKING OVERTIME: The head of United Firefighters of Los Angeles City Local 112 earned about $540,000 in 2022, in part by racking up serious overtime hours at fire stations, according to a Times investigation. Union President Freddy Escobar collected $198,155 in overtime pay that year. Escobar did not respond to inquiries about his pay.
— YOUTH HOSTILE?: The mayor's proposed budget calls for the elimination of the city's Youth Development Department, with some of its duties folded into another agency. Councilmember Monica Rodriguez, who worked to create the agency and is also a frequent Bass critic, has been speaking out against the move.
— GONDOLA LEFT HANGING: A state appeals court threw a roadblock in front of the proposed Dodger Stadium gondola this week, overturning the project's environmental impact report. The court said the document failed to properly address construction noise and the effects on nearby parkland. Backers of the project called those issues 'minor, technical matters.'
— HALTING HATE SPEECH: The City Council held off on approving a prohibition on two epithets — one targeting Black people, the other disparaging women — after a closed-door meeting on the legal issues. The council then referred the proposal back to the rules committee for more deliberations. 'This thing is very much alive. It's getting stronger by the day,' said Council President Marqueece Harris-Dawson, who authored the proposed ban.
— LOSING CONTROL: State Atty. Gen. Rob Bonta is considering placing L.A. County's juvenile halls in receivership, effectively removing them from the county's control. The move comes after years of chaos inside those facilities, including a spate of overdoses inside the newly reopened Los Padrinos Juvenile Hall.
— RUNNING SMOOTHLY: Bass announced Friday that she had helped mediate a deadlock between the L.A. Marathon and the Oscars, which were slated to take place on the same day in 2026. The result would have been chaos and 'logistical conflicts such as overlapping routes,' the mayor's office said. The agreement allows both events to take place in March next year. The Oscars will take place March 15. The marathon has not announced its date yet.
— (UN)HIDDEN GUNS: City Controller Kenneth Mejia's latest one-minute budget update got some extra attention on Instagram for his wardrobe choice: a sleeveless vest embroidered with the city seal and his name. Several commenters joked that Mejia's 'sleeves budget' had been cut, with the controller responding, 'This budget deficit cutting everything' with a sobbing emoji. Another commenter wrote, 'You are amazing and this is extremely helpful but wearing the city vest raw is wild.' Mejia clarified that he was not, in fact, wearing the vest 'raw' but had 'a muscle shirt (sleeveless) underneath.'
That's it for this week! Send your questions, comments and gossip to LAontheRecord@latimes.com. Did a friend forward you this email? Sign up here to get it in your inbox every Saturday morning.

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

How Florida protest organizers are preparing as LA unrest unfolds
How Florida protest organizers are preparing as LA unrest unfolds

Yahoo

timean hour ago

  • Yahoo

How Florida protest organizers are preparing as LA unrest unfolds

As Alan Kim walked toward a protest at Tampa's City Hall on Monday, he knew there was a chance that counter-protesters or law enforcement might act more harshly than usual. The day before, President Donald Trump had deployed National Guard troops to demonstrations in Los Angeles protesting U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement raids. Organizers across the country held protests and led marches in support of immigrant communities. Monday's demonstration drew a crowd of about 100 protesters, a police presence and counter-protesters. Kim, an organizer with the Tampa Bay Immigrant Solidarity Network, said he was 'pleased' that the protest was energetic, with people putting all their energy behind chanting loudly and in unison. While some Tampa organizers are preparing for additional demonstrations this weekend by beefing up safety measures, many say that working around efforts to suppress demonstrations is nothing new in Florida. 'We're not necessarily creating a ton of good tactics, we're just doubling down, tripling down, on the things that have served us,' Kim said. Helen Amburgey is an organizer with Pinellas chapter of the National Organization for Women, a group that's helping to coordinate a local 'No Kings' anti-Trump protest in St. Petersburg. She said the response to the Los Angeles protests has made her organization think more about safety plans and the guidance they give to protesters. She said the group is posting more reminders on social media that tell attendees to stay on sidewalks. The organization also expanded their safety marshal and volunteer teams for this weekend's protests, she said. Some organizers said they are also placing more of an emphasis on protecting immigrants without legal status. 'Even the citizens are getting to the point where they're so worried that they're going to get picked up, or the police are going to target them, or whatever, just because they happen to be immigrants,' Jared Dahan, an organizer for the Pinellas Empowerment Community Hub, said. Dahan said because many of the safety marshals are white or white-passing, they've come to an unspoken agreement that part of their role is to help de-escalate by physically moving themselves between a law enforcement officer and an immigrant if needed. Karla Correa, an organizer at Pinellas Democratic Socialists of America, said her organization hasn't added any specific safety protocols for this weekend's protests, but is aware that law enforcement or counter-protesters may try harder to suppress the demonstrations. Florida is already a state that cracks down on protests, Correa said. Kim said that the state will take any excuse to deem a protest a riot, so protesters and organizers need to be extra cognizant. 'Florida likes to lead the way on any demonstration of strict law and order,' Kim said. In 2021, Gov. Ron DeSantis signed a bill tightening restrictions on protests, which was challenged by civil rights groups who worried that peaceful protesters could be charged if demonstrations became violent. Last year, the Florida Supreme Court ruled that peaceful protesters are not at risk of being considered rioters, and the bill later was sent to the U.S. Court of Appeals for the 11th Circuit, which sided with DeSantis against concerns that the law was too vague. This past week, DeSantis compared Florida and California's response to protests against federal raids and policies regarding illegal immigration. He wrote on X that Florida will remain a law and order state. 'Florida will not let the inmates run the asylum,' DeSantis wrote. 'We are not going to sit by and let people take potshots at the men and women of law enforcement. Sheridan Murphy, executive director for the Florida chapter of the American Indian Movement, said violence from the government is nothing new, but openness about it is. He said he can understand why people of any immigration status may be wary of coming out to protest. 'I think it's incumbent on the rest of us to get out there,' he said. 'And be louder and stand up for those people that are at risk and have something to lose if they come out there.'

Funeral today for Charles Rangel, longtime N.Y. congressman and son of Harlem
Funeral today for Charles Rangel, longtime N.Y. congressman and son of Harlem

CBS News

time3 hours ago

  • CBS News

Funeral today for Charles Rangel, longtime N.Y. congressman and son of Harlem

Former Rep. Charles Rangel is being laid to rest Friday with a funeral at St. Patrick's Cathedral in Manhattan. The longtime New York congressman died last month at the age of 94. Mourners have been paying their respects at public viewings throughout the week, and Rangel's body lay in state Thursday at City Hall. His closed casket sat in the building's marbled rotunda, draped with an American flag. Uniformed police stood at attention on either side, backed by the state and nation's flags. The casket of former Rep. Charles Rangel, D-N.Y., lies in state in the rotunda of New York's City Hall, Thursday, June 12, 2025. Yuki Iwamura / AP The last person to lie in state at City Hall was City Councilman James Davis, who was assassinated by a political opponent in the council's chambers, located the floor above the rotunda, in 2003. Rangel's funeral service will stream live at 9:45 a.m. on CBS News New York in the video player above. "The Lion of Lenox Avenue" Rangel spent nearly 50 years representing New York on Capitol Hill. In 1970, he defeated Adam Clayton Powell Jr. in the Democratic primary for the state's 18th Congressional District. He was the first African-American to chair the influential House Ways and Means Committee, and he was a founding member of the Congressional Black Caucus. He was a son of Harlem, affectionately called "the Lion of Lenox Avenue," and part of the so-called "Harlem Gang of Four" coalition with Basil Paterson, Percy Sutton, Herman "Denny" Farrell and former Mayor David Dinkins. They were known as the first to break down race and class barriers. Late in his career, Rangel faced a series of ethics violations. In 2010, the House Ethics Committee convicted him of 11 counts of violating House rules, and Congress censured him. But the people of Harlem stood by him, and he was reelected to the House two more times before he retired in 2017. In addition to his long political career, Rangel was a decorated Korean War veteran. He leaves behind a son, daughter and three grandsons. contributed to this report.

It might rain on President Trump's parade
It might rain on President Trump's parade

Axios

time4 hours ago

  • Axios

It might rain on President Trump's parade

It might rain on President Trump's military parade Saturday in D.C., so the Army is considering precautions in case there's lightning. The big picture:"Rain won't stop us, the tanks don't melt, but if there's lightning then that puts the crowd at risk," Army spokesperson Steve Warren told the English newspaper The Times. "If there's lightning they will disperse the crowd and even cancel or postpone the parade." Showers and a potential thunderstorm are in the evening forecast, per the National Weather Service. The parade has been scheduled to start at 6:30pm and run along Constitution Avenue, stretching from 23rd Street NW near the Lincoln Memorial to 15th Street NW near the Washington Monument. Zoom in: President Trump views the Flag Day parade — which marks the 250th anniversary of the Army, and happens to fall on his 79th birthday — as a splashy show of U.S. military might. Planning for the event — which is to feature about 7,000 soldiers and more than 100 aircraft, tanks and rocket launchers and missiles — has been in the works for months. Crews have been erecting security fences around the perimeter of the White House, and a viewing stand on the Ellipse for Trump to watch the parade. The spectacle's climax has been planned to be Army parachuters touching down to present Trump with a folded American flag. Next, Trump would preside over re-enlistments for 250 soldiers. , before a fireworks display finale. The Army is working off a $45 million budget for the event, about a third of which would go toward repairing streets expected to be damaged by tanks and other heavy military vehicles. The cost estimates don't include the Secret Service's security spending. Zoom out: Critics of the parade have called it unnecessarily political and have compared Trump's push for the parade — namely his desire to display military hardware and celebrate his own birthday — as the type of thing that dictators do.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into the world of global news and events? Download our app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store