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UPDATE: San Francisco Faces $522 Million Budget Deficit Next Year
Created by Kimberlee Sakamoto on 11/19/2009 12:30:00 PM


SAN FRANCISCO (BCN) -- San Francisco Mayor Gavin Newsom is asking the heads of all city  departments to trim their budgets by 20 percent, and prepare to cut an  additional 10 percent, after his office projected a $522.2 million general  fund deficit for the coming fiscal year.

The news from the mayor's budget office means potentially severe  cutbacks to services, as well as layoffs, though Newsom today pledged to  protect public safety.

"We're going to hold the line on police and fire," Newsom  spokesman Joe Arellano said.

"We are looking at a gaping hole in our budget that is only going  to be fixed with a real examination of our current way of providing  services," he said.

Newsom told the departments to prepare for an additional  10-percent cut as a contingency plan, amid uncertainty about revenue the city  will generate and about future cuts at the state level.

On Wednesday, the California Legislative Analyst's Office  projected a $20.7 billion state budget deficit for fiscal year 2010-11.

"And we can't count on the help that we had last year," Arellano  said. He was referring to the more than $62 million in federal stimulus money  that helped trim a $575 million deficit this summer, a scenario that will  likely not be repeated next year.

Despite steep cuts to many city departments and hundreds of  layoffs earlier this year, officials said after the approval of a $6.6  billion budget that core city services had been preserved.

"We were cut to the bone then," Board of Supervisors President  David Chiu said earlier Thursday, before the exact deficit figures were  released.

"At this point, we don't have anything to cut but bone," Chiu  said. "It's going to be the most challenging budget situation that anyone has  ever seen (in San Francisco)."

The mayor can still approve or reject individual cuts, so the  likelihood that every department will actually lose 20 to 30 percent of their  budget is slim. The cuts, which would go into effect July 1, would also  require the approval of the Board of Supervisors.

Layoffs could begin sooner, according to Arellano.

The San Francisco Police Department would have to find a way to  trim almost $47 million under the targeted 30-percent budget reduction.

The Department of Public Health, with the city's largest budget,  would face $102 million in cuts.

Reducing the Fire Department's budget by 30 percent would incur  more than $13 million in cuts; the Sheriff's Department would face almost $40  million in cuts and the Human Services Agency more than $28 million.

Other departments such as the juvenile and adult probation  departments, the District Attorney's Office, the Public Defender's Office,  and Recreation and Parks would face several million dollars each in cuts.  Cuts would also affect the Fine Arts Museum, Asian Art Museum and Academy of  Sciences.

"We're going to have to have everything on the table, and get  creative," Arellano said.

For his part, Chiu said he would fight to protect "essential, core  services" such as police, fire and health services to the city's most  vulnerable, including seniors, the homeless and the mentally ill.

But even Thursday’s proposed solutions, along with ongoing mid-year  cuts, will still leave the city with a nearly $120 million deficit heading  into the next fiscal year, according to Budget Director Greg Wagner.

"That's what we've got to figure out," Wagner said.

"Every year we come up with solutions that are in addition to the  department targets," said Wagner. "And that's what we're going to have to do  again this year."

The city is also facing a revised budget deficit, of $53 million,  for the current year that must be resolved in the coming weeks.
      
(Copyright 2009, Bay City News, All rights reserved.)

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