A group of city workers and union leaders gathered on the steps of Oakland City Hall on Tuesday morning to demand answers to their allegations regarding tens of millions of dollars in uncollected city taxes.
At a time when Oakland is facing a potential budget shortfall of roughly $177 million, union leaders allege that the city’s Finance Department failed to collect taxes from thousands of businesses by the April 17, 2023 deadline and that as much as $34 million in unpaid business taxes from previous years could still be outstanding.
During the rally — and in a letter addressed to Mayor Sheng Thao and the City Council’s Finance and Management Committee — the unions said department staff, including Finance Director Erin Roseman, have been evasive or provided information that is “contradictory or untrue” about their tax collection efforts.
“The Finance Department is currently projecting a $177 million deficit. This deficit projection is in part based on the assumption that business tax collections for this year will remain at last year’s levels,” according to the letter. “Not only did Director Roseman fail to collect revenues from approximately half of Oakland businesses last year, but Director Roseman is essentially assuming that we will do the same this year, which is driving dramatic service cuts to our community and potential layoffs of union members.”