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Mayor Garcetti vetoes LA City Council’s plans to redirect funds from LAPD

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Citing a need for bolder action, Mayor Eric Garcetti vetoed a City Council spending plan that outlined how to reinvest millions of dollars from the Los Angeles Police Department budget into communities of color, his office said Tuesday.

The vetoed spending proposal would have allocated funds to “highest need census tracts” as identified by the city’s Economic Workforce Development Department, according to a Budget and Finance Committee Report.

The remaining $88,804,526 of the $150 million the City Council approved to cut from LAPD would have been available for city services and beautification, recreation and youth programming, jobs and economic development, and non-profit community investment in those areas.

“Los Angeles should be leading America by piloting bold ideas like exploring a guaranteed basic income, confronting the stark Black-white disparity among people experiencing homelessness, driving racial reconciliation, protecting jobs held by people of color with new opportunities in the city workforce and working in closer collaboration with our communities on allocation decisions,” Garcetti said in a letter to the City Council Monday night.

“Instead, this plan in too many places elevates what should be routine over what could be revolutionary.”

Garcetti said he would approve a spending plan that would:

  • set aside funding for pilot programs with local organizations and other partners that would address community safety, equity, reconciliation and other racial justice and income inequality issues;
  • accelerate and expand intervention and prevention work to restore peace in neighborhoods with high levels of violence;
  • reimagine public safety, starting with funding a 24-hour, unarmed crisis response pilot program so that mental health workers are dispatched to certain nonviolent 911 calls instead of police officers; and
  • protect the most vulnerable city employees from layoffs, particularly those hired through the city’s Targeted Local Hire program.

The City Council voted on Dec. 8 to move forward with recommendations to try to pull Los Angeles out of a potential $675 million revenue shortfall this year, and layoffs of city employees were on the table.

Garcetti said in his letter to council members that he wants to ensure that potential layoffs do not disproportionately effect employees hired through the Targeted Local Hire program, and he called on officials to protect them in the next spending plan.

Garcetti called City Council’s current spending plan “more business-as-usual” as opposed to the fundamental change that Angelenos are ready for.

A response from Council President Nury Martinez was not immediately available.

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