Los Angeles Times

BUDGET PLAN DRAWS ON TAX BOOST

Garcetti’s proposed $8.57-billion spending blueprint will focus on public safety and infrastruc­ture.

- By Peter Jamison

Los Angeles Mayor Eric Garcetti on Monday released his proposed $8.57billion budget for the next fiscal year, a spending plan that would take advantage of a modest boost in tax revenue from the reviving economy to invest in public safety and city infrastruc­ture.

After his State of the City address, which focused on new policing initiative­s, the mayor’s budget proposal is further evidence that combating rising crime will be a priority for his administra­tion as it enters its third year.

In addition to millions that would be devoted to improving the city’s trees, streets and sidewalks — all part of the “Back to Basics” agenda Garcetti championed during his first two years in office — more than $6 million would expand programs that target gangs and domestic violence.

“In this budget we’re strengthen­ing the basic services that mean the most: crime prevention, interventi­on and enforcemen­t,” Garcetti said Monday.

Such spending is enabled in part by a local economy that after years of recession appears to be on the upswing. City revenue from sources that typically rise and fall with the economy — such as property, business and sales taxes — grew 4.9% from last year, according to budget documents.

City Administra­tive Officer Miguel Santana, whose staff worked with the mayor’s office to produce the budget, said the city is on track to wipe out its yearover-year, or “structural,” budget shortfall by 2018. He said the budget also carries out common-sense financial practices that haven’t always been the norm, such as setting aside reserves and money for capital projects.

“This is the strongest budget that certainly I’ve experience­d,” said Santana, who has worked at the city for six years.

City officials neverthele­ss cautioned against exaggerati­ng the breathing room they’ve been given by

rising revenue. The new budget had to make up for a $165-million shortfall through various cost-saving measures. It also assumes no new raises or pension concession­s will be given in contract talks with unions representi­ng more than half the city’s civilian workforce.

The estimate for the city’s surplus in fiscal year 2018-19, which would be its first after years of deficits, has also been scaled back. Instead of the $23 million projected last year, Santana said he now expects the city would have a $2.6-million surplus.

The worsened forecast stems in part from a cumulative 8.2% raise the city agreed to give police officers in negotiatio­ns with their union last month.

City Council members must approve the budget and will begin holding hearings on it this month.

The mayor’s budget would set aside $4.1 million to expand street cleaning and install new trash bins, as well as $1 million for cleaning park bathrooms. Tree trimming would be expanded. The budget also includes $31 million to begin fixing city sidewalks as required by a $1.3-billion legal settlement this month.

Garcetti proposes spending $5.5 million to expand the long-running Gang Reduction and Youth Developmen­t program and $567,000 to expand Domestic Abuse Response Teams. The latter are groups of civilian workers who accompany police officers on domestic-violence calls.

The public safety measures, which Garcetti announced last week in his State of the City speech, come in response to a surge in violent crime after more than a decade of declining crime. In March, the LAPD reported a 27% rise in violent crimes and a 12% rise in property crimes compared with the same period last year.

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