“We are happy that all three resigned but the fight doesn’t end here,’’ Saleh said.
The group, whose acronym is Spanish for “enough,’’ said if the council members don’t step down by Monday’s council meeting, it will begin working for their recall.
The group supports Councilman Lorenzo Velez, who makes far less than his colleagues and has called for the other members to resign or freeze their salaries.
The group is talking with Velez to determine if he wants to remain on the council.
“We support his staying if he’s willing to help us fight the corruption,’’ Saleh said.
Council members emerged from an hourslong closed session at midnight yesterday and announced they had accepted the resignations of Chief Administrative Officer Robert Rizzo, Assistant City Manager Angela Spaccia, and Police Chief Randy Adams.
Rizzo was the highest paid at $787,637 a year, nearly twice the pay of President Obama, for overseeing one of the poorest towns in Los Angeles County.
Census figures for 2008 showed about 17 percent of the city’s less than 40,000 residents live in poverty.
Spaccia makes $376,288 a year and Adams earns $457,000, 50 percent more than what Charlie Beck, Los Angeles’s police chief, earns.
The three officials will not receive severance packages, the Los Angeles Times reported yesterday. Rizzo will step down at the end of August, and Spaccia will leave at the end of September. Adams will also leave at the end of August, after completing an evaluation of the Police Department, the Times said.
Rizzo would be entitled to a state pension of more than $650,000 a year for life, according to calculations made by the Times. That would make Rizzo, 56, the highest-paid retiree in the state pension system.
Adams could get more than $411,000 a year.
Spaccia, 51, could be eligible for as much as $250,000 a year when she reaches 55, though the figure is less precise than for the other two officials, the Times said.
When Rizzo arrived 17 years ago, Hernandez said, the city was $13 million in debt and on the verge of bankruptcy.
Rizzo obtained government grants to aid the city, the mayor said.
Jerry Brown, California’s attorney general, said his office has launched an investigation in conjunction with the state’s public employee retirement agency into pension and related benefits for Bell’s civic leaders.