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California

Delgadillo aides may keep jobs

They have tenure, and their presence could complicate Trutanich's

June 08, 2009|Rich Connell

Job protections arranged for termed-out Los Angeles City Atty. Rocky Delgadillo's inner circle of aides could complicate his successor's effort to take charge of the office just as the city grapples with major budget cuts, records and interviews show.

Typically, several top members of the city attorney's staff are political appointees. They serve without job protections and leave with the elected official. Indeed, earlier in his term, a number of Delgadillo's key aides served without job protections, including a previous chief of staff, top legal assistants and a communication director.


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But in recent years, all of Delgadillo's top staffers have been placed on tenure tracks, allowing them to secure civil service-like job protection rights. The aides, typically paid between $100,000 and $200,000 annually, hope to retain their current positions or serve in other assignments after City Atty.-elect Carmen Trutanich takes office, said Delgadillo's communication director, Nick Velasquez.

The office's senior legal aides are highly qualified and experienced, said Velasquez, who has received tenure and plans to stay.

Delgadillo "thinks the city is lucky to have such top-flight attorneys working tirelessly on city residents' behalf," he said. "That's why they were tenured."

Trutanich's key transition advisors were delving into the hiring and budget issues last week and had just begun to ask questions.

"How many . . . of the [top aides] that the city attorney did bring into the office remain and in what positions?" asked Bill Carter, a former federal prosecutor Trutanich has picked to head his city staff. "And what impacts does that have on the ability of the new city attorney to do what he needs to do?"

When Delgadillo took office in 2001, several of former City Atty. James K. Hahn's senior aides -- including chief of staff Tim McOsker -- moved with Hahn to the mayor's office. But Velasquez said most of Hahn's top appointees remained in the city attorney's office with tenure, which he portrayed as normal. He said city attorneys are allowed to appoint aides as either tenured or nontenured employees.

One complicating factor in the current transition, several observers noted, is that Delgadillo is not moving to another political office, where he could take some top appointees.

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