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Supervisors introduce multiple charter amendments on public safety, housing and accountability; board adopts several routine items
Summary
Board members introduced multiple charter amendments on firefighter and police retirement and staffing, children and youth budget accountability, an inspector general proposal, and incentives for nurses and 911 operators; the board also approved numerous consent items on first reading or by resolution.
Board members used Tuesday’s meeting to introduce several substantial charter amendments and policy proposals addressing public safety, housing and government accountability, and they also adopted a set of primarily procedural and consent items.
Introduced charter amendments and resolutions (high level): - Supervisor Catherine Stephanie proposed a charter amendment to reduce the retirement age for firefighters and paramedics hired after the 2012 reform from 58 to 55, arguing the change would reduce long‑term health costs and help retain firefighters who face elevated cancer and trauma risks. - Supervisor Matt Dorsey introduced a November ballot charter amendment to set minimum police staffing at 2,074 officers beginning July 1, 2025; establish a deferred retirement option plan (DROP) tied to patrol and investigations assignments to aid retention and lateral recruitment; and require periodic staffing reviews. - Supervisor Ahsha Safaie introduced a charter amendment to provide incentives to retain and recruit full‑time nurses and 911 emergency dispatchers, including a buyback of temporary nursing service credit and parity for dispatcher retirement benefits,…
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