A $400K severance package for Oakland official who resigned? 17%
By Eli Wolfe19% Natalie Orenstein7%
7/16/2026, 10:01:03 PM
BS Summary: This article contains 21 faulty reasoning types, including Halo Effect, Biased Writer Voice, and Negativity Bias, with Hasty Generalization as the most egregious example at 11.6% saturation with 65 hits. Analysis detected 554 faulty-reasoning hits from 558 analyzed words, generating a BS Score of 32.9% and a BS Rank of 17% (13,875 of 16,721 articles). This article is better (less manipulative) than 83.00% of the article peer group.
Councilmember Ken Houston plans to ask his colleagues to award a major severance package to former City Administrator Jestin Johnson.
Houston’s proposed resolution directs Betsy Lake, the interim city administrator, to execute a severance agreement with Johnson.
Per the deal, he’d receive $409,737 in exchange for agreeing not to sue the city.
The District 7 councilmember initially planned to ask a council committee to schedule the proposal for a late-July meeting, but he pulled the request at the last minute Thursday.
He told The Oaklandside he’s still set on pursuing the severance proposal but decided to hold it until after the council’s summer recess, which lasts from July 22 to September 17, when there’s more time to consider it.
Speaking with The Oaklandside earlier this week, Houston said he wants to acknowledge “the great work [Johnson] did for our city saving money, millions of dollars, and being able to move our city forward.”
Johnson held the highest-ranking unelected role in Oakland’s government for just over three years, until May 17.
That day, Mayor Barbara Lee announced that she had accepted Johnson’s resignation after a public records request surfaced text messages between Johnson and another city executive, in which they discussed female employees and colleagues in crass and inappropriate terms.
“Under my watch, I will not tolerate transgressions of this nature,” said Lee in a statement at the time.
She called the texts “wholly incompatible with the values of this administration.”
Johnson was on paid administrative leave for two months; his last day as a city employee was Tuesday.
Houston has been one of Johnson’s staunchest supporters.
In the wake of Johnson’s resignation, Houston told the San Francisco Chronicle that “there’s nothing wrong with men sharing their natural feelings with friends.”
He later clarified that he doesn’t condone workplace harassment.
Speaking with us this week, Houston said Johnson was “forced” to resign.
“The young man did a great job for our city,” Houston said.
“He should get at least a year’s severance to regroup.”
The proposed $409,737 payout is around the size of the annual salary for a city administrator in Oakland.
The city’s salary ordinance puts that pay range at $352,000 to $440,000.
“Should you destroy someone for a mistake?”
he said in another conversation with The Oaklandside.
He said if he found himself in Johnson’s position, he would sue Oakland, but his proposal will prevent that costly outcome.
Houston said he hasn’t spoken with Johnson about this idea and doesn’t know if the former administrator is even aware of his plan.
Johnson did not immediately respond to an interview request.
The city administrator, city attorney, and mayor were not involved in initiating this proposal.
Under his employment contract, Johnson would have been entitled to six months of salary as severance pay if he had been terminated without cause, provided he signed a document waiving any future legal claims against the city.
Instead, Johnson resigned in the wake of an investigation, so it appears he wouldn’t qualify for that package.
Any payments to former employees would have to be authorized by the City Council.
Oakland’s online legislation archive shows that some former city officials have sued the city and received settlements.
But we were unable to find any examples where the council approved severance pay for employees who resigned.
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