logo
L.A. council panel votes to save 1,000 city jobs, reducing layoffs to 650

L.A. council panel votes to save 1,000 city jobs, reducing layoffs to 650

A key committee of the Los Angeles City Council voted Friday to cut the number of employees targeted for layoff by Mayor Karen Bass by more than half, bringing the total down to an estimated 650.
The council's budget committee took steps to save more than 1,000 jobs by pursuing an array of cost-cutting measures, such as hiring fewer police officers and scaling back funding for Bass' Inside Safe program, which moves homeless people into temporary or permanent housing.
Councilmember Katy Yaroslavsky, who chairs the committee, said those and many other moves would help the city protect core services, including tree trimming, street resurfacing, street light repair and sanitation teams that address illegal dumping.
'We looked for ways to save positions — not for the sake of job counts only, but to make sure the departments can still do the work our constituents need them to do for their quality of life,' said Yaroslavsky, who represents part of the Westside.
The committee's recommendations for the proposed 2025-26 budget now head to the full council, which is scheduled to take them up on Thursday.
Councilmember Eunisses Hernandez, who sits on the committee, expressed some optimism after the vote.
'We were in very rough waters, and a very different landscape, when we started this process,' said Hernandez, who represents part of the Eastside. 'And now there seems to be some light between the clouds.'
As part of Friday's deliberations, the budget committee voted to recommend a slowdown in sworn hiring at the LAPD, which would leave the agency with 8,400 officers by June 30, 2026. That represents a reduction of about 300 from the current fiscal year and 1,600 compared with 2020.
The budget committee also agreed to eliminate 42 emergency incident technicians at the fire department, a move opposed by interim Fire Chief Ronnie Villanueva, while also canceling Bass' plan for a new homelessness unit within that agency.
In addition, the five-member panel recommended a hike in parking meter fees, which is expected to generate $14 million in the upcoming fiscal year.
Yaroslavsky said the changes endorsed by the budget committee on Friday would save about 150 civilian workers in the police department.
Chief Legislative Analyst Sharon Tso, who advises the council, said she believes that city officials will keep finding ways to reduce the number of layoffs, by transferring workers to vacant city positions or to agencies that are unaffected by the budget crisis, such as Los Angeles World Airports and the Port of Los Angeles.
'I think we're going to be able to truly get that number down to less than 500,' she told the committee.
Bass, faced with a nearly $1-billion shortfall, released a proposed budget last month that called for the layoff of about 1,600 employees, a fourth of them civilian workers at the LAPD. Some of the largest reductions were planned at agencies that handle sanitation, street repairs and maintenance of city facilities.
Friday's deliberations set the stage for many positions to remain intact, particularly at the Department of City Planning, which had been facing 115 layoffs. Kevin Keller, executive officer with that agency, said the committee found the funding to restore more than 100 of those positions.
'I know there's a lot of city workers that are breathing a big sigh of relief tonight,' said Roy Samaan, president of the Engineers and Architects Assn., whose union represents planning department employees.
L.A.'s budget crisis has been attributed to a number of factors, including rapidly rising legal payouts, lower-than-expected tax revenue and a package of raises for the city workforce that is expected to add $250 million to the upcoming budget, which goes into effect on July 1.
Bass and the council have been hoping to persuade city labor unions to provide financial concessions that would help avoid more cuts. So far, no deals have been struck.
On Friday, before the committee began its deliberations, Bass said she is optimistic about avoiding layoffs entirely. At the same time, she spoke against a budget strategy that pits the hiring of police officers against the preservation of other jobs, calling it 'a Sophie's Choice.'
If the LAPD slows down hiring, it will have fewer officers in the run-up to next year's hosting of the World Cup, she said.
'I'm not going accept that as my choice,' she said.
During the final minutes of Friday's five-hour meeting, council members made some last-minute restorations, identifying additional funds for youth programs, tree trimming and fire department mechanics. Hernandez pushed for the committee to restore $1 million for Represent LA, which provides legal defense of immigrants facing deportation or other enforcement actions, and $500,000 for graffiti paint-out crews.
Hernandez said the city needs to stand by immigrants amid a harsh federal crackdown. And she described graffiti removal as crucial for public safety in her district.
'Getting graffiti down quickly prevents a lot more people from getting shot, prevents them from getting killed,' she said.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Homeless criminal beat elderly Sikh worshipper with a golf club, leaving him soaked in blood: cops
Homeless criminal beat elderly Sikh worshipper with a golf club, leaving him soaked in blood: cops

New York Post

time31 minutes ago

  • New York Post

Homeless criminal beat elderly Sikh worshipper with a golf club, leaving him soaked in blood: cops

A homeless man with a long criminal history viciously beat a 70-year-old Sikh man with a golf club near his place of worship, according to California cops — with the victim seen soaked in blood before being put on a medically induced coma. The attacker approached Harpal Singh on a bike in North Hollywood on Aug. 4 — then repeatedly bashed him with the club, before walking away, according to KTLA. Disturbing footage shows the battered 70-year-old stoically sitting cross-legged on the ground, completely covered in blood — and left holding the club used to beat him. 3 Singh was filmed calmly sitting on the ground after the vicious attack. justice for Harpal Singh Singh was put in a medically induced coma with a fractured skull and possible brain damage. Bo Richard Vitagliano, 44, was arrested Monday night — a week after the attack — and charged with assault with a deadly weapon, LAPD Chief Jim McDonnell told reporters at a press conference Tuesday. The 'unhoused' suspect has 'an extensive criminal record,' including for narcotics, weapons and assault with a deadly weapon, the chief said. 3 Singh remained in a medically-induced coma as of Monday a week after he was attacked. justice for Harpal Singh The attack happened not far from the Sikh Gurdwara of Los Angeles — Singh's regular place of worship — but religion did not appear to be a factor in the attack, the chief said. 'Based on the evidence in this matter, North Hollywood detectives believe the assault was not a hate crime,' McDonnell stated. It instead seemed to be 'motivated by a dispute over property belonging to the victim,' the chief said, without elaborating on what. 3 Vitagliano approached Singh on a bike and beat him with a golf club. ktla5 However, the Sikh Coalition, an organization supporting the rights of Sikhs in the US, said they believe 'it is impossible to completely rule out a bias motive at this stage.' Cops would make extra patrols in the area, the chief said, to reassure members of the sikh community worshipping there.

He Served Time for a Machete Attack. Now, He's Been Arrested in the Fatal Stabbing of a Woman Who Hired Him as a Handyman
He Served Time for a Machete Attack. Now, He's Been Arrested in the Fatal Stabbing of a Woman Who Hired Him as a Handyman

Yahoo

time2 hours ago

  • Yahoo

He Served Time for a Machete Attack. Now, He's Been Arrested in the Fatal Stabbing of a Woman Who Hired Him as a Handyman

Alexander Lee Rogers, 51, was apprehended Tuesday, Aug. 12, in Los Angeles after a week-long manhuntNEED TO KNOW Alexander Lee Rogers was wanted for murder and attempted murder in Washington state Rogers is accused of fatally stabbing a woman and her brother-in-law who had hired him as a handyman He was on the run for a week before he was apprehended in Los AngelesA suspect who was wanted for allegedly stabbing a Washington state woman to death and seriously wounding her brother-in-law was captured in Los Angeles after a week-long manhunt, authorities said. Alexander Lee Rogers, 51, of Longview, Wash., was taken into custody on Tuesday, Aug. 12, in the Koreatown area, LAPD Chief Jim McDonnell said at a press conference, CBS News reports. Officers said they had positively identified the wanted suspect and that he was taken into custody without incident, McDonnell said. Police had been searching for Rogers, who was wanted in connection with the alleged Aug. 5 murder of Dawn Peters, 64, and the attempted murder of Andrew Peters, 73, Captain Branden McNew of the Longview Police Department said in a Facebook post on Aug. 6. Rogers is believed to have been working as a handyman for the victims, KOMO News reports. Dawn Peters died from her injuries and Andrew Peters was reported to be in stable condition and recovering at a local hospital. Andrew was slashed in the throat, but "if it wasn't for him pushing the panic button the other 2 people in the house would've also been dead," reads a GoFundMe set up to help defray costs of Dawn Peters' funeral and to help repair the home in the aftermath of the attack. L.A. County deputies had found Rogers' car, a black BMW, in Calabasas on Aug. was released from prison earlier this year after serving a sentence for first-degree assault in a machete attack that injured two people in the early 2000s, McNew told KTLA-TV. In the GoFundMe, the organizer wrote that Dawn "was truly the kindest woman." "There wasn't a single person on this earth that she didn't care about," the fundraising appeal reads. "She took care of everyone around her no matter the extent. Rogers remains jailed in Los Angeles pending extradition. It is unclear whether he has retained an attorney who can speak on his behalf. Read the original article on People

Teens arrested in connection to break-in targeting Brad Pitt's Los Angeles home
Teens arrested in connection to break-in targeting Brad Pitt's Los Angeles home

Yahoo

time6 hours ago

  • Yahoo

Teens arrested in connection to break-in targeting Brad Pitt's Los Angeles home

The Brief A group of teens was arrested for breaking into Brad Pitt's Los Angeles home. The suspects were identified as two 18-year-olds and two minors. The incident is part of a wider trend of celebrity home burglaries in Los Angeles. LOS ANGELES - A group of teens was arrested in connection to a break-in incident at Brad Pitt's Los Angeles home. What we know Late last month, Pitt's Los Feliz home was broken into by the group of masked suspects who hopped a fence. At the time of the July 25 incident, the Los Angeles Police Department had said the home was ransacked and the suspects got away. Fast-forward to August 12, LAPD Chief Jim McDonnell announced 18-year-old Jacory Watson, 18-year-old Charles Zare and a two minors, aged 16 and 17, were identified as suspects and arrested in connection to the July 25 break-in. What we don't know McDonnell briefly mentioned the burglary targeting Pitt was the latest in a string of celebrity and professional athletes getting their homes broken into across Los Angeles. However, it is unknown if the group of teens arrested in the Pitt home break-in case were connected to other celebrity home break-ins.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store