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New Report: Cost Of Occupy L.A. Now Double The Original Estimate

LOS ANGELES (CBS) — A new report released Friday says that the city's response to last year's Occupy Los Angeles protests and the two-month encampment at City Hall cost more than double the original estimate.

A new report from the Public Safety Committee says the cost of Occupy L.A. to the city was $4,710,947, $2 million more than an estimate reported in February. The extra expense comes from newly reported costs to police Occupy L.A. and the price to restore the City Hall Park and monuments, which were damaged by protesters camped at City Hall.

From early October to late November, hundreds of demonstrators camped in tents at the 1.7-acre City Hall Park as part of the national Occupy Wall Street movement. Protestors called for government and corporations to address what activists described as a growing disparity between the rich and the poor.

The encampment ended in a massive overnight raid by the Los Angeles Police Department to clear the park of demonstrators.

City Councilman Mitch Englander, who chairs the Public Safety Committee, said the report should make city leaders think twice before they endorse similar movements in the future.

The City Council in October voted 11-0 in support of the "peaceful and vibrant exercise in First Amendment Rights carried out by 'Occupy Los Angeles.'"

Then City Council President Eric Garcetti told protesters they could stay as along they wanted. Mayor Antonio Villaraigosa distributed ponchos to Occupy demonstrators during a rainy stretch.

"For every resolution or position the city might take, there's a cost," Englander said. "And we need to weigh that particularly now when we're going through a budget crisis."

The city is facing a $237 million budget deficit. Villaraigosa called for 231 layoffs and eliminating another 438 unfilled city positions in his proposed budget.

The city received $411,508 in donations and rebates to cover the cost of restoring the lawn around City Hall, according to the report from City Administrative Officer Miguel Santana.

(©2012 CBS Local Media, a division of CBS Radio Inc. All Rights Reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed. Wire services contributed to this report.)

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