Mayor defends layoffs after council member calls him “trash”

Mayor Mike Johnston on Wednesday rejected claims that city layoffs were retaliatory in nature as criticism against him turned personal.

Why it matters: The mayor must now work with a city council that includes a member who publicly called him “trash,” raising tensions ahead of next month’s budget process.

  • The dismissals are worsening already-low morale among city staff and prompting threats of political backlash.

State of play: Layoffs are finished for now as the mayor shifts focus to the city’s 2026 spending plan.

  • Next year’s budget is projected to see zero growth, though Johnston claims it won’t impact key city services, like recreation centers, police patrols and trash pickup.

Context: The mayor called allegations that some dismissals were targeted “irresponsible and factually false,” adding decisions weren’t made based “on who you know or who you’re married to,” during a Wednesday roundtable with reporters.

  • “I never wanted this part of this job,” Johnston added, calling his decision to cut staff “fiscally responsible.”

Friction point: Councilmember Stacie Gilmore, a frequent challenger of the mayor and whose husband was laid off, in a Facebook post on Tuesday escalated her criticism of Johnston, writing the mayor “is trash.”

  • While not directly responding to Gilmore’s comments, the mayor said the city’s charter requires him, not council, to draft the budget. Council is responsible for approving it.

Between the lines: Johnston refuted claims that his office’s spending, including millions on his signature homeless program and aid for migrants, led to the city’s budget crisis.

  • He said the city’s only spending $3 million more this year than in 2023 to provide services for those vulnerable populations. “That is not a $200 million deficit,” he added, noting migrant spending is expected to be zero next year.

How it works: The city used performance, history, skills, abilities and length of service to determine cuts, Kathy Nesbitt, the city’s human resources department head, said Wednesday…

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