STORYLINE Sacramento County Budget Crisis

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County lays off 300 staffers, 700 since July

by Kathleen Haley, published on September 22, 2009 at 8:20PM

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Sacramento County’s elected officials laid off 300 employees Tuesday, which brings the total number of layoffs to more than 700 since July, according to county spokesman Zeke Holst.

Susan Peters, chairwoman of the Board of Supervisors, said at the Tuesday board meeting that the layoffs were needed in response to the ailing economy. In her comments, she foreshadowed possible upcoming layoffs to address the county’s $76 million shortfall. “I honestly don’t think that this is the last time you’ll see us back here with position reductions,” Peters said.

“And we may be able to tweak a few things next week, but it’s not going to be very much, if anything,” she added. “I’m sorry the economy is the way it is, and I wish there was some way we could patch together this budget that no one would be hurt.”

Many more budget-related developments are expected to unfold in the coming weeks. The board approved layoffs Tuesday, but hasn’t yet passed its final budget for the current fiscal year. It has planned new budget hearings to take place Sept. 29, Oct. 1 and Oct. 2. The final budget is now scheduled to be approved Oct. 2, according to Mark Norris, administrator of the county’s Internal Services Agency.

County unions, including United Public Employees Local 1 and the Sacramento County Alliance of Law Enforcement, are likely to continue battling with the supervisors. Unions are strongly protesting a county plan to create shortened work schedules for about 7,000 employees.

Christa Yous, an investigative assistant with the Department of Human Assistance, told the supervisors that she has received a pink slip from the county and is on a future rehire list. With her voice shaking, Yous said she has become “the face of the terrible economic turmoil that’s before this county.” 

Photo of Supervisor Susan Peters by Kati Garner.

Kathleen Haley is a staff reporter for The Sacramento Press.

Conversation Express your views, debate, and be heard with those in your area closest to the issue.

edited on  September 22, 2009 | 08:46 PM
This situation is definitely going to get worse before it gets better. The losses amongst the Sacramento Sheriffs, it is horrible. I watch a hand-to-hand drug deal on Watt and Auburn Blvd, last Tuesday, while pumping gas. I have not seen that kind of activity in that area ever, I have been in Sacramento for 13 years now.
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September 23, 2009 | 08:12 AM
That area, and others have deteriorated because the focus of Sacramento's government is not quality of citizens' lives, but economic and population growth
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September 23, 2009 | 07:53 PM
Very good point and it saddens me.
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September 23, 2009 | 03:11 PM
Public employees feel the sting of economic downturn, just like their fellow citizens in the private sector.
Their worldview has been shattered.

News at 11.
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September 24, 2009 | 03:51 PM
The voters should lay Susan Peters off...
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