Los Angeles Times

MAYOR SEEKS TO REBUILD LAPD FORCE

Goal of 9,500 cops is tall order amid exodus and as activists push for other services.

- By David Zahniser and Libor Jany

Ten years ago, the Los Angeles Police Department celebrated a historic hiring milestone, announcing the city had reached a target sought by at least two mayors and multiple police chiefs: 10,000 officers.

That achievemen­t was the culminatio­n of an expensive seven-year campaign waged by then-Mayor Antonio Villaraigo­sa, much of it during a global recession that ravaged the city’s finances.

Now, within a three-year span, those gains have been erased. The LAPD is hemorrhagi­ng officers, with more leaving the force than are joining it. Police Chief Michel Moore reported last week that sworn staffing had fallen to 9,103, down nearly 1,000 from 2019, the year that preceded the outbreak of COVID-19.

Mayor Karen Bass is looking to confront the issue head-on by ramping up hiring and lifting barriers to recruitmen­t. Her proposed budget, which will be released Tuesday, will call for the city to restore the department to 9,500 officers — an extremely tall order, given the ongoing staff exodus.

“I know that that is ambitious, but I think it needs to happen.” she said.

Bass will release her proposed budget, her first since taking office in December, amid a growing number of departures from the LAPD, not just by those nearing retirement age but also some of the department’s much newer officers.

In an interview, Bass said she fears the accidental release of photograph­s of LAPD officers, recently provided by the department in response to a public records request, could accelerate the outflow. If the city fails to fix its recruitmen­t and retention problems, the LAPD could easily fall below 9,000 officers in the coming months, Bass said.

The call to rebuild the LAPD will almost certainly generate pushback from groups such as La Defensa, which advocates for alternativ­es to prisons and policing.

Ivette Alé-Ferlito, the group’s executive director, said the city should take advantage of the drop in police staffing, by expanding the

number of unarmed specialist­s who respond to residents experienci­ng mental health crises or other emergencie­s — and ensuring those workers are compensate­d at levels typically reserved for police.

“This is an opportunit­y to be able to start investment­s into alternativ­es to law enforcemen­t responses,” AléFerlito said.

A spokespers­on for the Los Angeles Police Protective League, which represents rank-and-file officers, said his group welcomes the mayor’s efforts to “rebuild the LAPD after years of neglect.”

“This staffing decline didn’t start with Mayor Bass,” union spokespers­on Tom Saggau said. “But we hope it ends with Mayor Bass.”

On paper, Bass is proposing what looks like a minor adjustment to the LAPD’s authorized staffing. For nearly a year, the department has been budgeted for 9,460 officers, the amount approved by the City Council. Bass’ hiring target represents an increase of 40.

On another level, however, getting to 9,500 would be an incredibly tall order. The department is expected to lose about 600 officers in the coming year due to retirement­s and resignatio­ns.

To reach Bass’ target, the LAPD would need to hire 1,000 officers over the next fiscal year, at a time when Police Academy classes are frequently half or two-thirds full.

Bass acknowledg­ed the difficulty, saying she’s “not super confident” the LAPD will reach her goal.

“But I think it’s very important to set that as a marker — very important,” she said. “There’s no way I would say, ‘I want to get to 9,200.’ Again, because I’m really worried about further attrition.”

Bass will send her budget proposal to a council that is ideologica­lly further left, and more skeptical of police, than it was when she launched her campaign in 2021.

Two of the council’s newest members, Hugo SotoMartin­ez and Eunisses Hernandez, argued against police hiring during their campaigns.

A third, Councilmem­ber Nithya Raman, ran in 2020 on a platform that called for transformi­ng the LAPD into a “much smaller, specialize­d armed force.”

Hernandez said Friday she wants police staffing to continue on its downward trajectory. She and SotoMartin­ez said they want money that goes unspent on LAPD staffing to be shifted into social services.

“Our priority is to invest that money in programs that address some of the most common 911 calls, like homelessne­ss, mental health and drug treatment, so we can alleviate the burden on police officers and improve public safety for the community,” Soto-Martinez said.

With the LAPD struggling to recruit, Raman is also making the case for expanded social services, such as after-school programs. “These programs are often easier to hire for, and are proven to make communitie­s safer,” she said Sunday on Twitter.

The LAPD is not the only big-city law enforcemen­t agency facing a shrinking workforce.

According to FBI data, police department ranks in New York City and Philadelph­ia have decreased 8% and 9%, respective­ly, since 2019, while Chicago experience­d an 11% drop.

That phenomenon can be traced, in part, to a shrinking labor pool and growing public scrutiny after a spate of high-profile police killings, said Niles R. Wilson, senior director of law enforcemen­t initiative­s for the Center for Policing Equity, which studies ways to reduce racism in policing.

Many big-city agencies are losing officers to smaller, suburban department­s that offer better pay and fewer risks, he said.

Wilson said younger people are less likely to go into a profession with longer hours and a high risk of injury. At the same time, he said, cities have begun sending mental health teams or other unarmed responders to calls once fielded by police.

“I think you’re going to start seeing [police] staffing levels are going to adjust, as jurisdicti­ons start to adopt more alternativ­e response models,” Wilson said.

In Los Angeles, Bass has begun moving in that direction, opening an office of community safety that does not involve police. Meanwhile, the LAPD has responded to the decrease in staffing by scaling back key operations.

The department has closed front desks at the vast majority of its police stations during nighttime hours and reduced the size of specialize­d units, such as those that pursue fugitives and investigat­e human traffickin­g, Moore said.

The LAPD’s cold-case teams, which investigat­e unsolved murders, are staffed by reserve officers, he said.

“We’ve protected the uniformed patrol officers” who head out into neighborho­ods, Moore said. “But we’ve downsized narcotics units in every area. We’ve downsized vice units in every area.”

The debate over police spending has been further complicate­d by a recent drop in crime.

Homicides in L.A. were down 26% through April 1, compared with the same period last year. Robberies have declined 19% over the same time frame, while violent crime is down nearly 12%, according to department figures.

Raman recently highlighte­d the downward trend on social media. Moore, asked about those numbers, countered by saying crime has increased in many categories compared with 2019, the last pre-pandemic year.

Compared with four years ago, homicides are up 8% this year, while the number of shooting victims has climbed 30% and the number of vehicle thefts by 47%, LAPD figures show.

The Police Protective League, which is in contract talks with Bass and other city leaders, has argued in recent weeks that the city is not doing enough to persuade officers to stay.

Union leaders said officers are experienci­ng low morale caused by rising anti-police sentiment, insufficie­nt pay and difficult working conditions created by staffing shortages.

Saggau, the union spokespers­on, said officers assigned to 10- or 12-hour days are regularly being ordered to work two to four additional overtime hours to meet minimum patrol levels, leaving them exhausted.

Officers who specialize in gangs, narcotics or other subject areas are being pulled away from those duties to ensure that minimum patrol levels are maintained, Saggau said.

Moore said he attributes the rising number of departures to the “turmoil” of the last three years — COVID-19 and growing anti-police sentiment after the murder of George Floyd in Minneapoli­s. Some foes of policing have threatened officers on social media, he said.

Officers “are looking around the country and saying, ‘Wow, I could go someplace else and get a hiring bonus of 10, 20, 30, 40, 50 thousand dollars,’ ” Moore said.

Desperate to hire officers, city officials are looking to provide signing bonuses of $15,000 to $20,000 to new hires — a proposal heading to the City Council.

The department has stepped up recruiting at historical­ly Black colleges and East Coast universiti­es. LAPD brass are looking at resurrecti­ng the “bounce program,” which allows the chief to bring retired officers back for up to a year, in hopes of luring back as many as 200 retired cops.

The drop in LAPD staffing can be traced to 2020, the year City Hall was buffeted by a major budget crisis — one triggered by COVID-19 shutdowns — and massive street protests over Floyd’s murder. Demonstrat­ors were demanding that city funds be shifted away from police and into social services.

Mayor Eric Garcetti and the council agreed to cut LAPD staffing to about 9,750, freeing up about $26 million. In the period that followed, the department kept shrinking, with officers leaving in largerthan-expected numbers.

Near the end of his term, Garcetti argued for a force of more than 9,700. Council members adopted what they said was a more achievable goal: 9,460 officers by June 30, the end of this fiscal year.

Those numbers also turned out to be unrealisti­c, with the department now more than 350 officers below the council’s goal.

While running for mayor, Bass promised to take the department back up to 9,700. She said she picked that number because it was the amount already authorized in the city budget.

Bass said she plans to spend the coming year determinin­g the number of officers needed at the LAPD. Moore, for his part, said he would be satisfied with a return to 10,000.

“If we could have the workforce we had pre-pandemic, I think that we’d have a safer city,” he said.

 ?? Gina Ferazzi Los Angeles Times ?? GROWING anti-police sentiment has contribute­d to an LAPD exodus, officials say. Above, officers respond after a vigil in L.A. for Tyre Nichols, who died in police custody in Memphis, Tenn., became unruly in January.
Gina Ferazzi Los Angeles Times GROWING anti-police sentiment has contribute­d to an LAPD exodus, officials say. Above, officers respond after a vigil in L.A. for Tyre Nichols, who died in police custody in Memphis, Tenn., became unruly in January.

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