The state's shortfall is estimated to top $35 billion.
"We're going to feel the brunt, there's no doubt about it," Davis
said. "It's going to impact our services here."
Burbank fire union officials are concerned about staff cuts.
"The only way you cut is in manpower," Burbank Firefighters Union
president Lew Stone said.
One potential cutting measure is taking a firefighter off a
four-engine rig, leaving it with three.
Before the mid-1980s, some Burbank engine and truck companies went
without a fourth firefighter on board even though studies have shown
a fourth person optimizes safety and efficiency, Stone said. At the
time, positions were shuffled so all but two stations carried four
firefighters in a company. Additional cuts could affect more
stations, Stone said.
City finance officials have asked departments to look at items in
their budgets that could be cut by 10%.
About half of the budget goes to the police and fire departments,
said the city's Financial Services Director Derek Hanway, who seemed
to echo what fire officials were saying.
"There's only so much you can cut without affecting [fire and
police services]," Hanway said.