LA City Council Looks to Reduce LAPD Officers Working Civilian Jobs

LA City Council Looks to Reduce LAPD Officers Working Civilian Jobs
Los Angeles Police Department officers wear facial covering while monitoring an "Open California" rally in downtown Los Angeles, on April 22, 2020. Frederic J. Brown/AFP via Getty Images
City News Service
Updated:

LOS ANGELES—With the Los Angeles Police Department’s (LAPD) sworn staffing below authorized levels, the city council on May 6 instructed the police department to report on the number of sworn officers performing civilian functions and include recommendations for how to minimize the number.

The department currently has 9,375 sworn employees, despite authorization to have a force of up to about 9,700 officers. The lower-than-authorized levels come as hiring within the department has not kept up with retirements and resignations in recent years. The department also has 2,662 civilian employees.

Mayor Eric Garcetti’s budget proposal for the next fiscal year includes an additional $149 million aimed partly at increasing staffing to 9,735 officers.

Councilman Joe Buscaino introduced the motion passed on May 6 seeking a report from the department on how many sworn officers are working in civilian positions instead of working in the field.

“With recent reductions to the LAPD workforce, it is all the more important that the existing sworn workforce be maximized and assigned to public safety functions,” Buscaino said.

The councilman has made public safety and expanding the LAPD a central part of his campaign for mayor, including calling for the LAPD’s force to increase to 11,000 officers. One of his opponents in the race, Rep. Karen Bass, has advocated for increasing the LAPD’s patrol personnel to reach already-authorized levels by moving desk officers to the field and hiring additional civilian personnel.

A timeline for the department to submit its report to the city council was not included in the motion.

City News Service
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