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Los Angeles’ budget priorities continue to face scrutiny over cuts to the Los Angeles Fire Department (LAFD), after several people warned officials ahead of the ongoing Southern California wildfires that cuts to the department could have devastating consequences.

Mayor Karen Bass slashed the fire department’s budget by over $17 million last year, a move that has drawn intense criticism after multiple fires were sparked in the area earlier this month, resulting in untold property losses and the deaths of over two dozen people.

In May of last year, LAFD Chief Kristin Crowley warned, “We are at that breaking point where firefighters can no longer do more with less.”

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Crowley went on the record pleading for funding to hire more firefighters. Data shows the LAFD is woefully understaffed compared to other major cities, with less than one firefighter per 1,000 residents. The recommended level is 2.5 firefighters per 1,000 residents.

TOPSHOT - Plumes of smoke are seen as a brush fire burns in Pacific Palisades, California on January 7, 2025. A fast-moving brushfire in a Los Angeles suburb burned buildings and sparked evacuations Tuesday as "life threatening" winds whipped the region. More than 200 acres (80 hectares) was burning in Pacific Palisades, a upscale spot with multi-million dollar homes in the Santa Monica Mountains, shuttering a key highway and blanketing the area with thick smoke. (Photo by David Swanson / AFP) (Photo by DAVID SWANSON/AFP via Getty Images)

The chief also asked to hire mechanics at the department as scores of equipment sat idle. Then just last month, LA city council member Traci Park noted, “We have million dollar rigs sitting at the yard with no mechanics to fix them.”

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As FOX News reported, while next year’s budget does call for more mechanics and replacement vehicles, LAFD also wants an additional $5 million for EV charging stations and nearly $2 million for a “diversity and inclusion plan.”

Perhaps the most dire warning came last month from Freddy Escobar, president of the United Firefighters of Los Angeles City union, who told the council weeks before the fires, “If we cut one position, if we close one station, if we close one resource, the residents of Los Angeles are going to pay the ultimate sacrifice and someone will die.”

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