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Welcome to Oakland-The Model City, Part 4: Layoffs Won’t Cure the Budget

Politics / US Politics Jul 14, 2010 - 11:50 AM GMT

By: JD_Rosendahl

Politics

If you haven't noticed, I've started a series of what might be many blogs in regards to The Model City (Oakland, CA) and their budgetary issues.  There are few cities in America that so completely demonstrates the municipal budgetary deficit completely.


If you want to see the prior blogs they are:

I've also stayed with the story to show how it progresses.  In many ways it should be the same story in your city if it has a deficit of size. 

1)  Welcome to Oakland-The Model City
2)  Welcome to Oakland-The Model City: Part Two..
3)  Welcome to Oakland-The Model City: Part 3..

Please consider:  Police layoffs won't end Oakland's challenges

It's a sobering measure of how tough times are for the city of Oakland that its leaders have chosen to lay off 80 police officers. Oakland had the highest violent-crime rate in the state of California last year, and the sixth highest in the nation.

The City Council didn't take its decision lightly. But faced with a $30.5 million deficit - and the fact that the police and fire departments consume 85 percent of the city's budget - it did what was politically repugnant but economically necessary.

The question is, will it be enough? And if not, what will be?

The harsh truth is that 2010 may be the start, not the end, of Oakland's economic distress.

"This year we're talking about 80 cops, and I can tell you that if we don't fix this structural deficit, next year it's going to be worse, and the year after even worse," said Ignacio De La Fuente, vice president of Oakland's City Council.

The projections for the next several years show even greater deficits than in 2010. Voters are facing ballot measures for higher taxes, with the certainty that their reward will be fewer services, no matter how they choose to vote.

De la Fuente utters what I’ve said, "the budgetary issue for Oakland and many cities have years of re-occurring issues and short falls to play out, and we are inning number 2 for Oakland".

Against that grim backdrop, even Oakland's famously dysfunctional city politics have begun to recede. Though Mayor Ron Dellums exhibited his typical semi-engagement - missing in action during the entire cycle of budget talks, he showed up at the 11th hour to proclaim the City Council's ideas as his own - the council itself has been mature, subdued and serious. Police Chief Anthony Batts has assured residents that 911 calls will remain the police department's top priority, no matter how many layoffs the department is facing. These people recognize the severity of what the city is facing.

In my opinion, Dellum is useless and incompetent leader for Oakland.  Working from offsite and mailing it in doesn’t cut it.  If you can’t jump in the middle of hard times, then you have no purpose for being leader.  A weak backboned political who seems to be tied to unions.  Good thing he's going soon.

Unfortunately, the police union does not.

The police union has been engaged in a fierce public-relations war with city officials. It wants a promise of no layoffs, ever, in exchange for agreeing to pay into their pension system. (Amazingly, the firefighters already have a no-layoff clause written into their contract.)

The last paragraph says everything you need to know.  No support from the Policemen’s union and Firemen are untouchable.

City Council People of The Model City can try all they want to balance the budget, but they will never, ever, ever get there because of the Policemen and firemen unions.

The only solution is obvious: BANKRUPCTY, its just a matter of when the City Council gets over it, and pulls the plug.

The insanity continues in The Model City.  Not much has really changed.

I'm for bankruptcy, how about you?

Hope all is well.

By J.D. Rosendahl

www.roseysoutlook.blogspot.com

J.D. Rosendahl was a former stock broker/investment consultant (currently not licensed) before becoming a Commercial Banker for the past 14 years. He manages his family's wealth, helping them avoid the high tech bubble and the real estate bubble melt downs and preserving wealth.

© 2010 Copyright J.D. Rosendahl - All Rights Reserved
Disclaimer: The above is a matter of opinion provided for general information purposes only and is not intended as investment advice. Information and analysis above are derived from sources and utilising methods believed to be reliable, but we cannot accept responsibility for any losses you may incur as a result of this analysis. Individuals should consult with their personal financial advisors.


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