Santa Clara County DA forewarns safety impacts from looming budget cuts
Santa Clara County District Attorney Jeff Rosen speaks at his annual state of the office on Tuesday, Feb. 17, 2026, in San Jose, Calif. Rosen outlined the impact of looming budget cuts on victim services and high-profile criminal investigations and prosecutions. (Dai Sugano/Bay Area News Group)
February 17, 2026, by Robert Solanga
SAN JOSE — He then stacked his office against other county budget priorities: “None of Santa Clara County’s amenities – parks, pools, schools, roads, sewers, and hospitals – are worth a dollar if the people who live here are not safe from crime.”
Rosen gave his speech amid a backdrop of running tension between him and the county administration recently inflamed by his contention that Measure A — a sales-tax increase approved by voters last year to add $330 million annually to county coffers — was misleadingly pitched to him as a way to stabilize funding and fend off cuts to county public safety infrastructure.
The four-term DA told this news organization last month that he felt “double crossed” when learning that all of the new tax revenue would go toward supporting the county’s healthcare system, which faces a projected annual loss of $1 billion in federal revenue, spurred in large part by reductions in Medicaid funding. Rosen has voiced frustration with the prospect of having supported Measure A and still bracing for heavy cuts to his office.
“The cuts we are facing mean potential and unprecedented layoffs,” Rosen said Tuesday. “No one here is expendable. No one. Are we better than other county employees? No. Of course not. All public servants have my respect and admiration. But these are objective financial decisions with real-world consequences.”
The extent of the feared budget cuts Rosen’s office faces was not fully detailed. His office was spared from any significant reductions in mid-year cuts made by the county this past week, which included the loss of 10 positions in the county Public Defender’s Office. The mid-year cuts involving the elimination of 365 jobs, about 85% of them vacant and more than half in county health care.
The remainder of Rosen’s speech outlined how funding cuts could reduce or eliminate his office’s bandwidth for community outreach and services, mental-health and drug offense diversion, and prosecutions of certain domestic violence and sexual assault crimes, and lower-level crimes including drunk driving, vandalism and theft.
If the anticipated cuts go through as feared, Rosen said, much of that work “will be gone, no more.”
At the end of his remarks Tuesday, after highlighting his prosecutors’ work from the past year, Rosen sought to keep their spirits up: “Our worth here will never be measured in dollars and cents … Our value lies in the 40,000 cases that we review, file and prosecute – with vigor – every year.”
“I don’t know what will happen in the coming months,” Rosen concluded. “Except this: You will fight like hell for this community. And I will fight like hell for you.”
Studies showing the connection between improved health outcomes, lower long-term costs, and strong public safety measures.
Violence Prevention in California — California Department of Public Health (CDPH)
California Violence Intervention and Prevention (CalVIP) Program — Board of State and Community Corrections (BSCC)
CalVIP Grant Awards and Program Outcomes — BSCC
Community Violence Intervention in California — Giffords Law Center
Community Violence Intervention (CVI) Services — California Department of Health Care Services (DHCS)
CVI Policy Guide (DHCS Implementation Document)
Domestic Violence Focus Area — Blue Shield of California Foundation
Intimate Partner Violence (IPV) Prevention — California Department of Public Health
California Partnership to End Domestic Violence (Statewide Coalition)
