Page 13 - FY 2021-22 Proposed Budget
P. 13

Dear Angelenos,


               COVID-19 has changed our lives forever. Angelenos have lost loved ones and
               neighbors, jobs and paychecks, a sense of stability, security, and certainty. All of us
               have felt the impacts, as people and professionals, as students and workers, as
               individuals and as a community. All of us have made difficult decisions and sacrifices in
               the name of the greater good: saving lives, slowing the spread of the virus, defeating
               the pandemic, and finding a path back to the embrace of family and friends.

               Our City government has made tough choices, too. A massive public health emergency
               led to a monumental fiscal emergency, furthered by the need to ramp up testing, contact
               tracing, and vital economic support for our most vulnerable. These were hard choices,
               and we would make them again in a second to keep our people safe. But it meant
               temporary pain for our bottom line; indeed, while our City never shut down its critical
               operations, we did have to tighten spending and limit services.

               At this moment, we see the light at the end of this long tunnel. Our City-run vaccination
               sites have administered more than 1 million doses of the COVID-19 vaccine and
               counting. Thanks to our new leadership in Washington, D.C., the American Rescue
               Plan will deliver essential aid to state and local governments, enabling us to preserve
               critical services, protect jobs jeopardized by the pandemic, restore fiscal strength to our
               reserves, and place us on steadier financial footing.

               With that renewed foundation in place, my budget is a bold investment — in a full and
               lasting recovery, in rebuilding our neighborhoods and our economy, in reimagining a
               fairer, more just city for generations ahead.

               That starts where it must: restoring our reserves; returning to pre-pandemic levels of
               services like street clean-ups, tree trimming, and graffiti abatement; and expanding
               existing programs across many departments — from neighborhood services and park
               programs to job training, workforce development, and infrastructure.


               When it comes to justice and equity, this budget is more aggressive and progressive
               than any other I’ve proposed as mayor. And it sets Los Angeles ahead of nearly every
               other city in putting dollars behind our ideals. That means a record-setting baseline
   8   9   10   11   12   13   14   15   16   17   18