KTLA

L.A. Mayor Garcetti calls for cuts, furloughs at City Hall in response to virus outbreak

Mayor Eric Garcetti speaks at a L.A. County Health Department press conference on the novel coronavirus on March 4, 2020, in Los Angeles. (ROBYN BECK/AFP via Getty Images)

Mayor Eric Garcetti released a pandemic-wounded spending plan Monday for the coming year that he called “a document of our pain” that includes service cuts and nearly 16,000 worker furloughs to manage economic fallout from the coronavirus crisis.

If approved, residents will wait longer to have trees trimmed, graffiti removed and streets and sidewalks fixed. Core services including police, trash pickup and firefighting will be largely safeguarded, but just about anything else is likely to take a hit. Even funds for closing illegal marijuana shops that proliferate in the city would be slashed.


And it could get worse, with much uncertainty about the spread of the virus, the direction of the state and national economy and when government stay-at-home orders will be lifted.

The spending reductions in Los Angeles are likely to be a sign of what’s to come at city halls across the nation, as jobless lines grow and local treasuries see steep drops in sales, hotel and other taxes they rely on to operate and provide services.

In New York, Mayor Bill de Blasio is proposing deep cuts in services over the next year, as the city grapples with the virus and its aftermath. His plans include suspending a summer-job program for young people, delaying expansion of a free prekindergarten program for 3-year-olds and closing city pools this summer.

A survey conducted by the National League of Cities found nearly universal agreement that cities would be hit by revenue shortfalls this year related to the outbreak, and in many cases furloughs and layoffs would be used to close budget gaps.

In Los Angeles, Garcetti warned in a letter accompanying the $10.5 billion proposed budget for the year that begins July 1 that “the road back to where we were will be long and difficult.”

He called the city’s financial future “unpredictable.”

Revenue growth in the coming year is expected to slow to less than 2%, compared to an average growth of 4.5% over the last six years. And since the crisis began, revenue estimates for next year dropped by over $230 million.

Life in the nation’s second most populous city has been largely unrecognizable with most residents staying at home. Notoriously congested freeways have been wide open, with only workers deemed essential still on the job. Even so, there are few places to go, with gyms, bars, beaches and restaurant dining rooms closed to the public.

A day earlier, the Democratic mayor recalled the 2008 recession and said, “This is bigger and it will hurt more.” In a tourism-reliant economy, he said hotel reservations had collapsed and airport passenger traffic had all but vanished.

“From a fiscal perspective, this is the worst it’s ever been,” he said.

The spread of the potentially lethal virus has reshaped an administration that had been largely focused on an intractable homelessness crisis.

As tax revenues sink, millions have been invested in testing and other costs related to the outbreak: an estimated $60 million by the end of April, though much of that spending could eventually be covered by federal aid.

The city had been under a hiring freeze. Under the mayor’s proposal, thousands of civilian city workers would take 26 furlough days, the equivalent of a 10% pay cut, in the coming year.