STORYLINE Sacramento County Budget Crisis

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Deputy Sheriff's Association: Budget cuts hurt response times

by Kathleen Haley, published on October 8, 2009 at 6:37PM

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Emergency call response times will suffer as a result of the nearly $1 million in budget cuts facing the Sacramento County Sheriff’s Department, according to the Sacramento County Deputy Sheriff’s Association.

When the Sacramento County Board of Supervisors approved the county's budget on Friday, it resolved a shortfall of $76 million. The county made major budget cuts to its programs and departments — including the Sheriff’s Department — and has laid off more than 700 employees since July. 

The Sheriff’s Department will not face layoffs. However, the cuts will result in more vacancies for deputy positions at the department, said Kevin Mickelson, president of the Sacramento County Deputy Sheriff’s Association. 

To pare down its budget to make the $987,000 in cuts, the department will need to create four more deputy vacancies, Mickelson said. The vacancies will be achieved through attrition. This means that when four deputies retire, resign or are terminated, the department will keep four open deputy positions, he explained.

Right now, the department has six deputy vacancies and one sheriff’s security officer vacancy, he said, noting that he additional four vacancies would create a total of 10 vacant deputy positions. The vacancies would bring down the number of deputies to 231 from 241, Mickelson said.

The department’s response time to critical calls will become longer as a result of the vacancies, Mickelson said. “There’s no way two ways about it,” he added.

Mickelson blamed the Board of Supervisors for making cuts to the Sheriff’s Department while providing funding to programs that cover the arts and the American River Parkway. “At some point in time, the Board of Supervisors needs to make public safety their No. 1 obligation,” Mickelson told The Sacramento Press.

The Board of Supervisors uses a list of priorities when it makes budget decisions. Law enforcement is the board’s first priority after it addresses mandated services and its debts, according to county documents. 

Mickelson questions whether the board is truly making public safety its first priority.

But county officials view the issue differently. 

Responding to Mickelson’s criticism, county spokesman Zeke Holst noted that the Board of Supervisors restored funding to the Sheriff’s Department in June. “At [the] proposed budget in June, the Board of Supervisors approved the restoration of $12.5 million to the Sheriff’s Department budget. Also, at this time, the board approved the concessions from the Deputy Sheriff’s Association of $10.6 million.”

Holst also pointed out that the supervisors made another restoration, of nearly $2 million, to the Sheriff’s Department on Oct. 2. 

Betsy Braziel, a county communications officer, wrote in an Oct. 2 press release: “Board members reinforced their commitment to making public safety and protection of children their highest spending priorities.”

While the board restored funding to Child Protective Services, it also approved 186 layoffs to that agency.

Sacramento County needed to make its most recent $987,000 cut to the Sheriff’s Department because the county lost revenues from sales taxes that are collected statewide and then doled out to local governments for public safety purposes, County Executive Terry Schutten said last month.

During recent budget hearings Supervisor Jimmie Yee expressed concern for cuts to county social services while saying that the board has been supporting law enforcement with funding.

Yee addressed Sheriff’s Chief Deputy Mark Iwasa on the issue of funding during a Sept. 16 hearing. “I just want you to be aware that, hey, we’re struggling to find funds to keep you whole. But at the same, we have to look at the broad picture of the county, too.”

Yee added that the Sheriff’s Department is “not the only thing here.”

Photo by Anthony Bento.

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.

October 8, 2009 | 07:55 PM
What hubrus!!...the reason the county is broke and has to lay off deputies is because of all the years the deputies held the supervisors hostage and got one pay raise after another. If the deputies would agree to salary concessions...even just forgoe pay raises the layoff wouldn't be needed.

But the sheriff's department isn't going to tell you that..it is too easy to try and frighten the public into gutting every other program ...but theirs...
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edited on  October 9, 2009 | 11:39 AM
The recession has cut our cost of living exspenses by up to 30%, say some reports. Other reports say 20%. But no one dissagrees, that it has been a recession. Everything must receed, just to stay equal. If you can keep the same pay right now, you have gotten a big raise.
It apprears like the department will create a reduction of force through attrition, a very luxurious method of reducing spending. Oh the rough life of a non-competitive industry....how do they do it.
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October 9, 2009 | 01:58 AM
"Mickelson questions whether the board is truly making public safety its first priority."

WOW, when the music changes so does the dance. Having attended numerous county supervisor hearings and listening to the greedy (sac county sheriff's department) come in like pirates and hijack the budget hearings to take from the needy to give to the greedy, Mickelson's response is not surprising yet it is disappointing. The scare tactics have lost momentum if I had a dollar for everytime I heard this threat during budget times I wouldn't be broke-- LOL But seriously Sacramento Sheriff's department has been a drain on the county budget for years, heck how much "were" they spending on cell phone usage for personal calls, nice pretty boats, and other "wants" not needs? I'm not worried about the response time, I've seen so many on one street for a non violent crime caravanning after one another I am not worried. But I do worry that the deceit coming from the department, during budget times, shows public safety is not top priority of the Sheriff's department- Top priority appears to be MONEY and "inner department safety/ job security NOT "public" safety
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