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Our layoff wave is over,” Denver Mayor Mike Johnston told employees during a meeting Wednesday morning. “That is complete.” ...
The layoffs that began Monday were lower than expected by some and represent less than 2% of the workforce that is paid through the general fund.
On Monday and Tuesday, the city notified 171 city workers that their jobs were being eliminated and they were being laid off ...
Mayor Mike Johnston said layoffs are needed to help close a $50 million deficit for the rest of this year, as well as a ...
Thirty-one people working in Denver's Department of Transportation and Infrastructure were laid off, the largest number of ...
More than 170 Denver city workers will no longer be employed with the city as it tries to plug a $200 million gap in next ...
Mayor Mike Johnston's office said all layoff notifications will go out over the course of a week, beginning Aug. 18.
The president of Local Union 158, Mark Wallin, said he has had several sleepless nights as a result of the looming layoffs.
Those were part of broader city-wide layoffs of 171 workers in an effort to save money amid a $200 million budget shortfall.
Denver outlines personnel cuts to mitigate a $200M budget shortfall, including 171 layoffs and the elimination of nearly 928 ...
The city and county of Denver announced it has completed layoff notifications to 169 employees "as part of a larger effort to ...
Mayor Mike Johnston on Wednesday rejected claims that city layoffs were retaliatory in nature as criticism against him turned ...