Shame on LA! Creating City Budget Behind Closed Doors

LA WATCHDOG

LA WATCHDOG--In a memo to All General Managers, Councilman Paul Krekorian, the Chair of the Budget and Finance Committee, indicated there will not be 40 hours of budget hearings as there have been in the past. 

This year, the Budget and Finance Committee will meet on Monday, May 11.  It will not be seeking department input, but will consider written responses from departments on the impact that furloughs will have on City employees and City services.  

In a motion* sponsored by Krekorian and City Council President Nury Martinez and seconded by Councilman Curren Price, the Budget and Finance Committee wanted to get a better idea of the City ‘s finances, the adequacy of its reserves for the next two years, and whether there are better revenue and expense assumptions than those used in developing the Mayor’s Proposed Budget. 

As such, the Budget and Finance Committee is requesting reports from the Chief Legislative Analyst and the City Administrative Officer.  

  1. An analysis of the city's financial health as it ends the 2019-2020 Fiscal Year and approaches the 2020-2021 Fiscal Year in light of the current state of the national and local economy; and 
  1. An analysis of the current rate of expense across all departments during the COVID19 emergency for the remainder of the 2019-20 Fiscal Year and whether the proposed budget for 2020-21 will sufficiently prepare the city for the period of the continuing emergency declaration; and  
  1. An analysis of the Mayor's 2020-2021 Proposed Budget and the furlough, its impact on city operations and programs, and on services for the most vulnerable residents and families. 

But what about the public, the media, and Neighborhood Councils?  This sounds like the Budget and Finance Committee is treating us like mushrooms: in the dark and piling on the manure. 

This is unacceptable.  We have a right to know what is going on, especially after the debacle last year when the Mayor and the City Council did not include the impact of the new labor agreements with the police and firefighters in the budget even though they damn well knew that these contracts would blow a massive $1.6 billion hole in the City’s finances for the next five years.  

In addition, the Budget and Finance Committee needs to come clean on the impact of the new labor agreements on the City’s budget for the next two years, a hit that is estimated to be almost $550 million in increased employee compensation. 

We recognize that the revenue outlook is uncertain and that the city will need to review its budget every two or three weeks according to Mayor Garcetti’s comments on Monday to Larry Mantle, the host of Air Talk on KPCC (89.3 FM).  But that does not mean you can keep Angelenos in the dark.  We insist on transparency this year. 

 

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Krekorian Motion (CF 20-0500)

City Financial Health / Rate of Expenses / FY 2019-20 / FY 2020-21 / Revenue Generating Activities / Furlough Implementation

 

 

 (Jack Humphreville writes LA Watchdog for CityWatch. He is the President of the DWP Advocacy Committee and is the Budget and DWP representative for the Greater Wilshire Neighborhood Council.  He is a Neighborhood Council Budget Advocate.  He can be reached at:  [email protected].)

 

-cw