The rule change came after Sheriff Alex Villanueva refused to fire employees in his department who have failed to follow the county's vaccination mandate.
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Villanueva continues resistance to vaccine mandate, says he could lose thousands of deputies
The motion passed without any discussion on a 4-1 vote. Supervisor Kathryn Barger was the only one who voted no.
The rule change applies to every county department head, but is seen as a way to reign in Villanueva, who has butted heads with the supervisors since taking office.
Villanueva has said enforcing the vaccination mandate would decimate his already shorthanded force, leading to 3,000 deputies and 1,000 professional staff members losing their jobs. The sheriff offered no evidence to back those numbers up.
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The similarly-sized Los Angeles Police Department has fired fewer than 10 officers.
The board's move to supersede Villanueva's firing authority garnered several critical public comment calls during the board's Tuesday meeting.
"The proposed revision of the county code on today's agenda is a targeted overreach by members of this board to undermine the authority of one person, an elected department head who's actions are not inline the board's wishes," said Tab Rhodes, President of the Professional Police Officers Association, who called into the meeting.
Villanueva was unavailable for comment.