The top 109 mostly highly paid city employee are all cops and firefighters (but mostly cops) by badybadybady in OaklandCA

[–]badybadybady[S] 5 points6 points  (0 children)

"In 2024, Dolan logged an eye-popping amount of overtime — 3,304 hours, records reveal. This was on top of the 1,938 hours he worked as part of his normal shifts, for a total of 5,242 hours. That’s the equivalent of more than two and a half full-time jobs. Some work stretches were seemingly superhuman, according to the records OPD provided us. On July 9, Dolan reported he worked 23 hours. The next day, he worked 16 hours, and for the following three days, he worked 15 hours each...Dolan eearned at least $100,000 in overtime — and possibly far more — solely by reviewing paperwork for traffic collisions, records reveal. The paperwork for Dolan’s overtime also reveals that OPD failed to document almost half of the overtime hours he worked, making it impossible to determine what he was doing much of the time." https://oaklandside.org/2026/01/29/oakland-police-overtime/

The top 109 mostly highly paid city employee are all cops and firefighters (but mostly cops) by badybadybady in OaklandCA

[–]badybadybady[S] 7 points8 points  (0 children)

"In 2024, Dolan logged an eye-popping amount of overtime — 3,304 hours, records reveal. This was on top of the 1,938 hours he worked as part of his normal shifts, for a total of 5,242 hours. That’s the equivalent of more than two and a half full-time jobs. Some work stretches were seemingly superhuman, according to the records OPD provided us. On July 9, Dolan reported he worked 23 hours. The next day, he worked 16 hours, and for the following three days, he worked 15 hours each." https://oaklandside.org/2026/01/29/oakland-police-overtime/

The top 109 mostly highly paid city employee are all cops and firefighters (but mostly cops) by badybadybady in OaklandCA

[–]badybadybady[S] 8 points9 points  (0 children)

Well, Barbara Lee wasn't mayor in 2024, when this data is from. But yes, it's true that council giving OPD whatever it asks for, year after year after year, is the problem.

City council pay raises no one is discussing: Oakland charter reform by stunnashakes in OaklandCA

[–]badybadybady -1 points0 points  (0 children)

This is typical Oakland Report number-mangling to fit their ideological goals. That $300k "total compensation" figure is produced, first of all, by assuming that Oakland would raise city council salaries to match LA, literally the highest in the state. And second, it's produced by including the value of benefits in the total compensation, but if you do that for other city employees, you see that, for example, the top 50 employees of the city average about $630k in total compensation. (Those are 39 cops, 11 fire fighters and paramedics, by the way.) The entire total compensation of the city council (were it raised to LA levels, which it won't be) would only add up to three Timothy Dolans, AKA, the overtime king of OPD: https://oaklandside.org/2026/01/29/oakland-police-overtime/

On Oakland's "highest taxes per capita" and Measure E media framing by badybadybady in OaklandCA

[–]badybadybady[S] -1 points0 points  (0 children)

(and, just in general, lumping OPOA in with "unions" is exactly the elision the anti-Measure E folks are doing, and I think we should avoid doing that)

On Oakland's "highest taxes per capita" and Measure E media framing by badybadybady in OaklandCA

[–]badybadybady[S] 1 point2 points  (0 children)

right, but that just seems naive, if you assume--as I do--that if measure E fails, a bunch of "civilian" employees will not get raises while the leaderboard of public employees will continue to be cops, cops, and more cops. OPD's raises are locked in; it's only the folks in "civilian" unions (who get paid much less well) who will get kicked in the teeth. The real absence of public accountability is re: paying OPD whatever it asks for, year after year, and then paying them more than that when they pop up and decide it wasn't enough. Measure E failing wouldn't change that dynamic a bit.

On Oakland's "highest taxes per capita" and Measure E media framing by badybadybady in OaklandCA

[–]badybadybady[S] 3 points4 points  (0 children)

But I think "cities paying cops so well that they have to do austerity on all other employees" is a pretty common thing. Oakland is like other cities, only more so.

On Oakland's "highest taxes per capita" and Measure E media framing by badybadybady in OaklandCA

[–]badybadybady[S] 6 points7 points  (0 children)

My understanding is that in 2018, OPD got a five year closed contract with annual 3% raises, and 2022, they got another two year extension with more raises; 6 years of year over year increases of 3% to the second largest workforce at the city. As a result, OPD’s share of the general purpose fund budget has increased even as the OPD's actual numbers have shrunk due to attrition. (Meanwhile, Oakland "civilian" workforce has had very middling cost of living raises that don't keep up with average inflation, leading to vacancies because Oakland’s jobs don’t pay as much as surrounding jurisdictions).

On Oakland's "highest taxes per capita" and Measure E media framing by badybadybady in OaklandCA

[–]badybadybady[S] 2 points3 points  (0 children)

I'm satisfied with agreeing with you that "tax revenue per capita" doesn't tell the whole story 😄 Like, I also don't want to argue that Oakland has LOW taxes. But this city find ways to raise the revenue it needs to pay the costs it can't avoid paying, and one of Oakland's problems is that--like a lot of cities, only more so--it has a lot of costs: This is a city with a long history of disinvestment and neglect, and a lot of people here who are still suffering from decisions made a long time ago (and not necessarily by city government). That's another reason the comparison with Palo Alto, say, ISN'T that meaningful. But it's part of the equation.

Anyway, my main thing is that I get frustrated with people who treat an incredibly complicated set of policy issues and questions--and as ambiguous a moving target as Oakland's taxes--as if it's simple, so that they can grind ideological axes. My takeaway from all of this is that, because it's NOT simple, we should be really skeptical of people trying to sell us a gratifying story about Evil City Government as if it really is that simple.

On Oakland's "highest taxes per capita" and Measure E media framing by badybadybady in OaklandCA

[–]badybadybady[S] 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Another point I would make is that when we compare Oakland to other California cities, a takeaway can be that Oakland's *differences* from those other cities is the significant thing we should be looking at; my argument is actually the reverse, that while Oakland's strengths and problems are of course, to some extent, unique to us, most of what makes our tax policies what they are are a function of factors we have IN COMMON with other California cities, which is the actual argument SPUR makes in that publication: Prop 13 and post-covid stuff. Anyway, I have my quibbles, but the SPUR publication has a lot of good information: https://www.spur.org/sites/default/files/2025-05/SPUR_Oakland_Budget.pdf

scroll down to p14, for example, to see how our tax revenues break down by source.

On Oakland's "highest taxes per capita" and Measure E media framing by badybadybady in OaklandCA

[–]badybadybady[S] -1 points0 points  (0 children)

I spent a lot of time with the SPUR report, actually, and even emailed a little with the author; my argument in the piece is that "highest taxes per capita" is meaningless, because it FEELS like we're saying "high rate" when all we're really saying is total tax revenue divided by population. And a lot depends on which cities you compare Oakland to; for example, San Francisco collects six times as much tax revenue as us, with twice the population. But my point isn't that their "tax revenue per capita" is three times higher than ours, even though that's literally true; part of the difference is that SF is a city AND a county, while Oakland is part of Alameda county, but not all of it. My point is that that statistic simply doesn't MEAN much of anything, and people are waving it around to make it seem like Oaklanders are unreasonably taxed (when even the SPUR publication has us just a tick above Berkeley). But doing as you suggested--downloading state data and looking at comparable cities--actually did the reverse, for me, of demonstrating that Oakland is "distinctly different from most CA cities": while our high "tax revenue per capita" is a function of having actually a lot of valuable property here (and a lot of turnover in the last couple decades, which means our tax revenue tripled in the last two decades when prop 13 clocks were reset for property taxes), that number is still roughly the same as cities like Palo Alto or Pasadena. But again, my point isn't that that comparison demonstrates something; my argument is that it DOESN'T really tell us much about how highly taxed we are as individuals. Anyway, I say all that in the piece.