The downgrade primarily reflects the continued erosion of the city's historically better-than-average willingness and ability to quickly rebalance its budget mid-year. This is a particularly important rating factor for Los Angeles since its balance sheet has typically been relatively weak for the rating level. The downgrade also partly reflects the likelihood that the city's general fund reserves at the end of the current fiscal year could be materially weaker than we had previously expected...
The city's Democrat leadership appears to be a model both for the state government in Sacramento and President Obama. Their game plan: spend like drunken liberals; empower public sector unions to rape taxpayers; tax the hell out of everyone; and create vast new bureaucracies to hamstring the private sector.
In fact, the L.A. City Controller says the city could run out of cash by May 5th.
As the Los Angeles Department of Water and Power seeks a hefty taxpayer rate hike, a Daily News review of salary data shows the average utility worker makes $76,949 a year - or nearly 20 percent more than the average civilian city worker.
More than 1,140 of the utility's employees - or about 13 percent - take home more than $100,000 a year. And General Manager Ron Deaton, who is on medical leave, rakes in $344,624 a year - making him the city's highest-paid worker.
...the total cost per full-time employee in fiscal 2007 was $142,400 a year including health care, death benefits and disability, workers' compensation, medical services, employee health benefits and training...
In the middle of the worst budget crisis in Los Angeles history, one department is thriving without mandatory job cuts, furlough days or loss of the perks they've come to enjoy. In fact, thanks to a new contract approved by the L.A. City Council in December, most of its already well-paid workers will get salary increases over the next five years. Which department is it? It's the Los Angeles Department of Water and Power (DWP)...
If there's one thing history should teach us, it's that public sector unions need to be outlawed. Unlike unions in the private sector, which are organized to share in the legitimate profits of free enterprise, the public unions exist only to suck the blood of the taxpayer.
Put simply, the public sector unions and their Democrat sycophants have declared war against taxpayers. And it's time for taxpayers to fight back.
Between the union "obligations" and the aid to the illegals it was only a matter of time. The state will follow suit shortly.
ReplyDeleteGee. Isn't it a shame the Eco-tards won't do anything with all that oil sitting right under the city.
ReplyDeleteBwuhahahahahahahahahahahahahahahaha.
Maybe they can make a cable show:
ReplyDelete"Life After Liberals."
DOUG,
ReplyDeleteThere you were.... you had "Cinco de Mayo" staring you right in the face. But did you pick it up and use it like a spiked club? Noooooo....
Will I not pick it up and use it like a spiked club? Nooooo.....
The spending is terrible and completely out of control. But worse than that, IMO, is the thoughtless destruction of businesses in LA and California.
ReplyDeleteNew global warming regulations (Assembly Bill 32) will drive up the cost of electric power. Nearby states canoffer cheaper power and better business climate, and those of us who work in LA are hosed.
Our Democrat power structure thinks this is great. They're perfectly willing to sacrifice our jobs to the false god of global warming.