LA City Council Cuts LAPD Spending, Reducing Officers to 2008 Level

LAPD car
Photo credit David McNew/Getty Images

The Los Angeles City Council voted Wednesday to cut hiring at the Police Department and bring the number of police officers down to below 10,000 by next summer.

The council voted 12 to 2 to cut the number of officers to 9,757, a number that hasn't been seen since 2008. 

Much of the money will be coming from funds set aside for overtime pay for officers, and then redirected into community services for Black, Latino, and other marginalized groups, supporting jobs for young people and hiring programs. 

The Budget and Finance committee agreed on June 23 to cut the Los Angeles Police Department's budget by more than $133 million

The motion was initially filed by Council President Nury Martinez as well as councilmen Herb Wesson and Curren Price.

"We need to rethink what it is that makes people safer and makes communities stronger. We cannot just look at the police in isolation," the motion stated. "There is no doubt that communities of color suffer disproportionately from negative interactions with the police."

The operating budget of the LAPD was proposed to be nearly $1.86 billion, up about $122 million from last year, but advocates said, especially due to the financial reckoning of COVID-19, enhancing police spending is not the right move at this time.

"The city of Los Angeles is in the midst of a health and economic pandemic unlike any we have ever seen in our lifetimes," Martinez said. "Following the gruesome murder of George Floyd by police officers in Minneapolis, we are also in the midst of a social and racial justice crisis of epic proportions, where the good people of Los Angeles, as well as the nation, are asking their leaders to re-examine our priorities and to commit to taking a giant leap forward in recognizing and ending racism against black Americans."

Martinez said the budget reduction is "just one aspect of change," and that to end racism will take broader and ideological changes.

"Ultimately, we cannot talk about change, we have to be about change," the council president said.