Could Oakland police face layoffs to combat budget deficit?

As budget woes percolate in Oakland, the city’s unions are gearing up to defend against the worst-case scenario: layoffs.

City officials are going to great lengths to avoid mentioning them, but they have also not yet ruled out the possibility of cutting staff to combat a projected $177 million operating deficit by the end of the current fiscal year in June.

The shortfall — largely a consequence of tax revenue on home sales falling far short of the city’s lofty projections — has set off alarm bells at City Hall, prompting union officials to appear at a council meeting Tuesday and warn against slashing rank-and-file jobs or even furloughing workers.

“We matter in this city,” Shirnell Smith, an Oakland city worker and member of SEIU Local 1021, which represents a large share of the city’s employees across various departments, said at Tuesday’s meeting. “When you’re thinking about these cuts — as we’ve said many times before — chop from the top.”

Perhaps the most politically painful downsizing for the city’s leaders would be to the Oakland Police Department, the only division of the city that outspent its budget last year — by $28 million.

At least for now, it appears sworn officers in the department will be protected from those cuts as a result of an existing labor agreement with the city that lasts through June 2026.

But in a department where 911 dispatcher staffing fell to critical lows last year, layoffs to non-officer employees could present a whole new set of challenges for the brand-new police chief, Floyd Mitchell, whom city officials have said will start on the job sometime in mid-May.

Around that same time, Mayor Sheng Thao is expected to release a draft proposal of various adjustments necessary to achieve a balanced budget.

Mayor Sheng Thao introduces new Oakland police Chief Floyd Mitchell at City Hall in Oakland, Calif., on Wednesday, March 27, 2024. (Jane Tyska/Bay Area News Group)
Mayor Sheng Thao introduces new Oakland police Chief Floyd Mitchell at City Hall in Oakland, Calif., on Wednesday, March 27, 2024. (Jane Tyska/Bay Area News Group) 

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