As Coral Gables prepares to release its proposed 2025 budget on July 1, labor remains its largest expense—as it is for any organization built on service. From policing and planning to sanitation and permitting, the city’s value resides in the people who deliver it. Prioritizing compensation affirms a serious commitment to professional standards and the high-quality public service residents expect.
But that investment comes with trade-offs.
City employees rightly seek improved compensation. Life is expensive and quality comes at a cost. Pay signals value, supports recruitment and retention, and sustains morale. Particularly in public service—where job satisfaction often depends on respect and purpose—higher compensation is not only justified but necessary.
So how does the city make room for it?
That is the pressing question as Coral Gables weighs its budget. The options are few: cut capital improvements and community investments; raise taxes, a politically toxic move; or slow the growth of the workforce so existing dollars go further. We propose the third—by pausing new hires and carefully evaluating whether vacant positions truly need to be filled.
Coral Gables should implement a hiring freeze.
This is a show of support for the city’s current employees—the police officers, engineers, inspectors, planners, firefighters, clerks, and sanitation workers whose work defines Coral Gables’ reputation. A hiring freeze allows the city to reward and retain those already serving, rather than expand payroll at the expense of meaningful raises and better benefits.
Yes, such a move will face resistance. Department heads may worry their teams will be stretched too thin. Union representatives may object on principle, though they might find common cause if raises for existing members are prioritized over hypothetical hires. And yes, egos matter too. In public agencies, as in the private sector, status is often tied to headcount. The larger the department, the greater its perceived importance.
Effective management is about results.
In the business world, a simple test often reveals which roles are essential: if an employee takes a week or two of vacation and the operation falters, their role is mission-critical. If the wheels keep turning, the position may not be. Coral Gables should apply that same logic to its own staffing.
A hiring freeze means taking a breath. Pausing growth. Evaluating which roles deliver real value. That pause creates room to increase compensation without cannibalizing parks, roads, or neighborhood improvements.
Technology can help. Many municipal functions today can be streamlined with digital tools. But that only works when the systems are dependable. Investing in automation or software to reduce redundancy must be done carefully, with attention to function over flash. In many departments, greater efficiency is already within reach—but it requires leadership to insist on it.
If Coral Gables is serious about rewarding and retaining its workforce, it must show the discipline to reject growth for growth’s sake. That starts with a hiring freeze. It sends a clear message: the city values its people, intends to compensate them well, and is willing to make tough choices to do so.
Not anti-labor. Pro-worker.
We urge the city commission to treat this year’s budget as a statement of values. The path to better pay runs through smarter staffing—and that begins by rewarding the people already doing the work.
As a gesture of good faith, the city should meet the police union more than halfway in the upcoming contract negotiations. Then, with compensation momentum established, it should implement a clearly signaled hiring freeze. Doing so would show seriousness—and affirm that Coral Gables invests first in those already committed to serving it.


