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News Link • Economy - Economics USA

LA Budget Crisis, Deficit Approaches $1 Billion, Layoffs 'Nearly Inevitable'

• https://www.zerohedge.com, by Mike Shedlock

Full Blown Crisis

Please note L.A. city budget shortfall grows to nearly $1 billion, with layoffs 'nearly inevitable'

L.A.'s financial problems exploded into a full-blown crisis on Wednesday, with the city's top budget official announcing that next year's shortfall is now just shy of $1 billion, making layoffs "nearly inevitable."

City Administrative Officer Matt Szabo said Mayor Karen Bass' proposed budget, which will be released April 21, will close that gap, but it will require difficult "cost-cutting decisions." He warned that the severity of revenue declines and rising costs has created a budget gap that makes layoffs "nearly inevitable."

Szabo, in his presentation to the council Wednesday, attributed the city's financial woes, in part, to increased spending on legal payouts, which have ballooned over the last few years. Tax revenues have been coming in much weaker than expected — and are expected to soften further in the upcoming budget year, which starts July 1.

Pay raises for city employees that are scheduled to go into effect in the coming budget year are expected to consume an additional $250 million. On top of that, Szabo said, the city needs to put hundreds of millions into its reserve fund, which has been drained in recent months in an attempt to balance this year's budget.

Councilmember Katy Yaroslavsky, who heads the budget committee, said the council will need to look at the possibility of asking unions representing city workers to defer the scheduled raises or make other concessions.

"I think everything needs to be on the table," she said in an interview.

David Green, president and executive director of Service Employees International Union Local 721, called Szabo's remarks "short-sighted and irresponsible."

"There's no question that all of us are in shock with this number," said Councilmember Bob Blumenfield, who sits on the council's budget committee.

Blumenfield predicted that city leaders would need to seek financial concessions from the workforce.

"Eighty percent of our expenses is labor," he said. "If we are short more than 10% of our budget, the 'math doesn't math' without looking at labor costs."

Over the last two years, Bass and the council have signed off on raises and increased benefits for an array of unions — first police officers, then civilian city workers, then firefighters.


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