Los Angeles Times

A demand to slash budget of the LAPD

Members of the public urge a council panel to change city spending priorities.

- By Dakota Smith and David Zahniser

For years, Los Angeles city budget hearings have mostly drawn the usual collection of business, labor and nonprofit leaders who weigh in on such issues as sidewalk repairs, new bicycle lanes and the cost of feeding the animals in the city’s zoo.

But in the midst of a nationwide movement to end police brutality, Monday’s budget committee hearing drew an angry chorus of new voices demanding that council members defund the Los Angeles Police Department and invest more money in housing, social workers and jobs programs.

Some callers cast City Council members — many of them veterans of local and state politics — as out of touch with a public pushing for a complete reworking of city spending priorities and an end to police abuse.

“You are the past. Black Lives Matter and their allies are the future. Commit to our demands,” said Kendall Mayhew, a community organizer with Ground Game L.A., which is seeking to cut police spending by 90% and reinvest the funds into mental health counselors, tenant advocates and others assigned to respond to social ills.

Hundreds of people signed up to speak during Monday’s hearing. The vast majority of those who got through called for the LAPD budget to be dramatical­ly scaled back or eliminated altogether.

One caller described the LAPD as a “scar” on the city, and another compared the department to a cancer that needed to be cut out.

“This is our time to lead,” said yet another caller. “It is

happening with or without your agreement.”

Many at Monday’s hearing spoke in favor of the People’s Budget, an alternativ­e spending plan for City Hall advanced by Black Lives Matter Los Angeles and several other organizati­ons.

The plan would allocate 5.7% of the city’s general fund to the LAPD, a reduction of about 90% when compared with Mayor Eric Garcetti’s spending plan for the upcoming budget year.

The meeting was the first since Garcetti and Council President Nury Martinez vowed to find up to $150 million in savings at the LAPD and redirect the money to job programs, health initiative­s and other services for black Angelenos and other communitie­s of color.

The budget committee won’t take up the proposal from Garcetti and Martinez until June 15. Instead, council members heard two hours of public testimony and a grim report on the city’s reserve fund, which has been nearly depleted as city leaders work to balance the budget for the current fiscal year.

Council members typically review and approve the mayor’s budget each year. This time, however, they allowed Garcetti’s citywide spending plan to go into effect without a vote, saying there was too much uncertaint­y about the city’s revenue numbers that followed the shutdowns caused by the coronaviru­s outbreak.

Garcetti had originally proposed a 7% increase to the LAPD budget, only to change course in the wake of massive protests over police brutality sparked by the death of George Floyd in Minneapoli­s.

Councilman Mike Bonin, who represents coastal neighborho­ods stretching from Westcheste­r north to Pacific Palisades, said L.A. and the nation were at a moment of reckoning similar to the fall of the Soviet Union. The city has spent generation­s expanding the size of the LAPD budget and “holding everything else hostage,” he said. Now, Angelenos are asking their leaders to take a different approach, he said.

“Things that seemed impossible two days ago now seem like they don’t go far enough,” he said.

But Councilman Paul Koretz, whose Westside district stretches from Westwood north to Encino, said he fears that city leaders are responding to an assortment of urgent issues — homelessne­ss, the coronaviru­s outbreak and calls to address racial injustice — without keeping track of the money. That type of spending, left unchecked, could push the city into bankruptcy, Koretz warned.

The size of the police budget has been a source of criticism during previous budget cycles. But it hasn’t drawn such widespread scrutiny — and public outcry — until this year. The LAPD budget, when pensions and healthcare are included, is expected to consume $3.15 billion of the city’s $10.5-billion budget in the coming year.

Brady Collins with the Koreatown Immigrant Workers Alliance said the city “has still not done its part” since the 1992 civil unrest that followed the verdicts in the beating of Rodney King by police officers. Improving access to housing and economic opportunit­y is the best policy for preventing crime and recovering from the pandemic, he said.

“The city budget should invest in communitie­s, not policing,” he said.

No one from the Los Angeles Police Protective League, the union that represents rank-and-file officers, testified during Monday’s hearing. But in a statement, league spokesman Dustin DeRollo called the notion of laying off 9,000 officers “absurd” and “reckless.”

“It would literally leave a city of millions protected by under 900 officers,” he said.

 ?? Brian van der Brug Los Angeles Times ?? THE LAPD is set to receive $3.15 billion of the city’s $10.5-billion budget in the next fiscal year. But concern over shootings by police has changed the discussion.
Brian van der Brug Los Angeles Times THE LAPD is set to receive $3.15 billion of the city’s $10.5-billion budget in the next fiscal year. But concern over shootings by police has changed the discussion.

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