Anonymous ID: 523476 June 23, 2020, 8:56 p.m. No.9725966   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>6018 >>6186

Durkan proposes $20 million in cuts to Seattle police as part of proposal to balance budget

 

Mayor Jenny Durkan will propose $20 million in cuts to the Seattle Police Department in the last six months of 2020, the largest cuts to any department as the city attempts to fill a budget shortfall of around $400 million this year caused by the novel coronavirus.

 

The city expects to spend $233 million this year responding to the coronavirus, although some of that is money the city would have otherwise spent in other areas. It’s been spent increasingly on emergency food and housing assistance, providing free coronavirus testing, on support for first responders, and adapting city staffing and facilities to handle the crisis, according to the mayor’s office.

 

At the same time, the city’s $1.5 billion general fund is likely to see tax revenues fall $200 million below expectations this year, as the epidemic has shuttered businesses and ground the economy to a standstill.

 

In total, the city needs to find $378 million to balance this year’s budget, the mayor’s office projects.

 

Layoffs across city departments are “inevitable” in 2021, Ben Noble, the city’s budget director said.

 

“This is the biggest financial hit the city has ever seen,” Noble said. “The local economy is getting smaller, significantly smaller.”

 

Durkan, in a presentation to the Seattle City Council Wednesday, will propose budget changes that attempt to fill the gap with state and federal aid, one-time reserves and city emergency funds, a hiring freeze, canceled travel for city employees and by tapping voter-approved transportation and parks levies.

 

Many of the protests that have dominated Seattle for more than three weeks have demanded a 50% cut to the police department’s budget as among their cornerstone goals. The call for defunding has echoed across the country since the police killing of George Floyd in Minneapolis, with those supporting cuts asking for savings to be put in community programs and alternatives to policing.

 

The mayor proposes slashing about 5% of the Seattle police budget this year and a hiring freeze on new officers next year until a new plan is developed “reflecting community priorities for public safety.”

 

Durkan has also asked her staff and the police department to prepare models by the end of July of what 20%, 30% and 50% budget cuts would look like.

 

The cuts this year include a “pause” on $4 million that had been budgeted to plan a new North Precinct building.

 

“We have to rethink and reimagine policing, including our culture and budget,” Durkan said Monday. “We are asking police officers more and more to deal with all the problems society has created.”

 

In a “letter to the community” Tuesday, Seattle police Chief Carmen Best wrote that the department is reviewing which of its “responsibilities can acceptably be passed to other agencies, or completely turned over to the community.”

 

Noble said that the cuts to the police budget are “somewhat higher than originally anticipated,” in light of the protests.

 

André Taylor, who leads the Seattle organization Not This Time! and works to reduce police violence, said he was pleased to hear Durkan’s proposal, calling it a “down payment on a promise.”

 

“At least she’s putting her money where her mouth is on this shortfall budget,” Taylor, who’s received criticism from other activists for working with Durkan’s office in the past, said. “Instead of just talking about it, she’s really produced something for real. That means she means serious business.”

 

The mayor’s proposed changes this year include a new $5 million in spending for mentorship programs for youth of color.

 

Durkan also proposes taking $10 million from 2015’s Move Seattle levy, which largely funds street maintenance and bus projects, and $10 million from the 2014 Seattle Park District. The city is “pausing” plans to build a new downtown streetcar, connecting the lines on First Hill and in South Lake Union.

 

https://www.seattletimes.com/seattle-news/politics/durkan-proposes-20-million-in-cuts-to-seattle-police-as-part-of-proposal-to-balance-budget/

Anonymous ID: 523476 June 23, 2020, 9:19 p.m. No.9726224   🗄️.is 🔗kun

Gavin Newsom gets power to withhold funds for counties that don’t follow COVID-19 rules

 

California counties must comply with state and federal COVID-19 rules if they want part of up to $1 billion in funding through the state budget, according to details of a budget deal expected to win approval in the Legislature.

 

The agreement Gov. Gavin Newsom and legislative leaders reached Sunday night would allocate $750 million to counties for social safety net programs. That amount could be increased to $1 billion if the federal government sends California additional aid money that it has requested, according to bill language posted Monday at 8:45 p.m.

 

The funding is contingent on counties following federal guidance, the state’s stay-at-home order and other directives laid out by the California Department of Public Health to prevent the spread of the coronavirus that causes COVID-19. That includes the statewide mask order Newsom issued last week that requires people to wear masks in public. The Department of Public Health has also issued guidance for businesses requiring them to implement social distancing and sanitation measures for staff and customers.

 

The policy would put Newsom’s Department of Finance in charge of determining whether counties are compliant.

 

Tying the funding to COVID-19 compliance is part of state government’s effort to fight the coronavirus, which has killed more than 5,500 Californians, Department of Finance spokesman H.D. Palmer said. Counties are already required to follow the Newsom administration’s public health guidelines related to the pandemic, he said.

 

Assemblyman James Gallagher, a Republican who represents a rural district that includes Sutter County, said the policy goes against the Democratic governor’s assertion that counties have discretion in responding to the pandemic.

 

“Once again, the Governor is instituting a one-size-fits all mandate, this time with major financial consequences,” Gallagher said in a written statement. “In our time of greatest need, our federal funds are being held hostage.”

 

Sutter County, in conjunction with neighboring Yuba County, began began allowing businesses to reopen ahead of state guidance in May, citing low coronavirus infection and death rates.

 

The two counties are currently in compliance with all state requirements and plan to continue following the state’s rules, Yuba County spokeswoman Rachel Rosenbaum said. The county is still reviewing the budget deal, but officials don’t have concerns about funding being tied to compliance, she said.

 

“We don’t have any real concerns right now,” she said. “We’re in step with the state.”

 

The California State Association of Counties had pushed for $1 billion in funding through the state budget to preserve funding public health departments and social safety net programs.

 

“California’s Counties strongly support the funding as critically important to preserve some semblance of a safety net,” spokeswoman Sara Floor wrote in an email to The Bee, adding that the association is still reviewing the specifics of the proposal.

 

Lawmakers and Newsom plan to approve the budget deal before July 1, when the next fiscal year begins.

 

https://www.sacbee.com/news/politics-government/capitol-alert/article243746937.html