The Signal

Sheriff: Budget cuts ‘hurt public safety’

- By Tammy Murga Signal Staff Writer

Los Angeles County’s proposed budget cuts to the Sheriff’s Department — meant to address a $935 million shortfall in the wake of the coronaviru­s pandemic — is a threat to public safety, according to a statement issued Saturday by Sheriff Alex Villanueva.

“The budget cuts announced by county CEO Sachi Hamai are targeted specifical­ly to hurt public safety in Los Angeles County, while sparing virtually every other function of county government from any reductions,” Villanueva said in a prepared statement.

The statement is the latest salvo in a contentiou­s backand-forth debate over the past few months between Hamai and Villanueva.

His comment follows Hamai’s revised 2020-21 countywide $34.9 billion spending plan released Thursday, which called for “across-the-board” cuts of 8% and the eliminatio­n of 3,251 positions, of which 2,596 are already vacant, and 655 potential layoffs.

Specific to the LASD, the proposal plans for more than 400 layoffs and to slash $162 million from its budget of $3.3 billion.

Officials have stated the suggested cuts are largely due to sales tax revenues sharply declining amid an economic crisis brought forth by COVID-19.

“These cuts come at a time when jails were depopulate­d of over 5,000 inmates in order to combat the COVID-19 pandemic,” said Villanueva. “Now that restrictio­ns are lifting, violent crimes, such as murder, are on the rise across the county and other metropolit­an areas, such as New York City and Chicago. Now is not the time to cut vital law enforcemen­t services. That should be the last thing cut.”

The 2020-21 plan looks to eliminate the Safe Streets Bureau, a gang enforcemen­t unit; Parks Bureau; Special Victims Bureau, which investigat­es sexual/physical abuse of children, rape and human traffickin­g cases; Community Partnershi­p Bureau, Fraud and Cybercrime­s Bureau and Major Crimes Bureau, as well as “drasticall­y” reduce custody operations and Mental Health Evaluation Teams, said Villanueva.

Hamai said the proposed spending cuts do not look to condemn any county department­s.

“These proposed cuts are not intended to penalize any department, or to diminish the importance of their work,” she said. “Rather, these curtailmen­ts are part of an equitable process of cost reductions that will affect all county department­s.”

Villanueva said Hamai and the county Board of Supervisor­s have embraced the Defund the Police movement in cutting LASD funding, while “the bloated county bureaucrac­y remains virtually intact, which should always be the first to suffer reductions.”

The sheriff has previously accused the county of underfundi­ng LASD by $400 million and, most recently, has accused the county of withholdin­g $30 million for the department’s planned body-worn cameras. In March, Villanueva also called the Board of Supervisor­s’ vote that replaced him with Hamai as the chief of emergency operations a “power grab.” He was recently subpoenaed by the Sheriff Civilian Oversight Commission to testify about his handling of the COVID-19 outbreak in county jails.

 ?? Bobby Block/The Signal ?? The Los Angeles County 2020-21 budget proposes cuts of $162 million from the L.A. County Sheriff’s Department, a move Sheriff Alex Villanueva says would pose a threat to public safety.
Bobby Block/The Signal The Los Angeles County 2020-21 budget proposes cuts of $162 million from the L.A. County Sheriff’s Department, a move Sheriff Alex Villanueva says would pose a threat to public safety.

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