Washington, DC, is in the same position. The force has lost something like 200 officers since the beginning of 2019, and no new officers have been retired. Even worse, the 2022 budget has NO funds for hiring new officers.
It's looking right now like another 100+ officers will separate by the time 2022 rolls around.
DC was in something of a similar position back in the 1970s and 1980s (for very different reasons) with a concomitant spike in crime rates, especially murder rates. It took a court various court orders to get them hiring again, including court orders that dropped the qualifications... It was an unmitigated disaster. A fair number of new police officers had criminal records, and continued their criminal activity while on the job. Huge scandals. And, around the same time, DC switched to Glocks from revolvers... and cut training budgets to the bone. Another unmitigated disaster as unintentional shootings SKYROCKETED. The city ended up paying out millions in settlements.
A lot of cities are on the same path, and it's going to take decades to sort out. We're quickly moving back into the situation in the 1970s where criminals ruled many of the major US cities and residents who could fled to the suburbs.