SOUTHERN CALIFORNIA / A news summary
The Local Review / DEVELOPMENTS IN LOS ANGELES COUNTY
Council Hears New Plan to Pay Rampart Suits
The mayor's proposal is premature and there appear to be less costly
alternatives, said City Administrative Officer William Fujioka in a report to
the City Council.
Fujioka said the city should instead set aside $20 million in reserves
annually from the general fund to cover Rampart-related bills during the next
few years and then consider issuing special bonds, as required by police
lawsuit settlements, against city general fund revenue.
Judgment obligation bonds backed by the general fund could save the city 2%
in interest and tens of millions of dollars over the proposal to bond upfront
against less certain revenue from the city's share of the national settlement
with tobacco companies, Fujioka said.
"It's a lower interest rate and it's a more secure form of financing," said
Fujioka, who has been facing attempts by Riordan to remove him from office.
The chairman of the council's Budget and Finance Committee, which will
consider the report Wednesday, said he generally agrees with Fujioka's
recommendations.
"I do feel it would be less expensive than the tobacco fund approach," said
Councilman Mike Feuer.
Riordan is reviewing the report, but stood by his proposal to use the
tobacco funds.
"The mayor feels good about what he proposed," said Jessica Copen, a
spokeswoman for the mayor.
The mayor's office has argued behind the scenes that judgment obligation
bonds tied to the general fund put taxpayers on the hook for repayment, but
that using tobacco money shifts the risk to private investors who would buy
the city's right to the $300 million in tobacco funds.
Monday's debate over finances is the latest round of bickering over the
city's response to the Rampart scandal, in which police officers are alleged
to have framed innocent people, beaten others and covered up unjustified
shootings.
The city attorney's office has estimated that the city could face lawsuit
payments totaling $125 million on just the first 99 cases.
Tuesday, March 7, 2000
Home Edition
Section: Metro
Page: B-4
LOS ANGELES
--
A top Los Angeles manager recommended Monday that the city not pursue Mayor
Richard Riordan's plan to issue bonds against future tobacco settlement money
to pay for lawsuits stemming from the Rampart police scandal.