A growing rift between the Baltimore City Council and the mayor's office has emerged over how to spend surplus funds.

In a surprise move, the City Council voted Thursday night to eliminate funding for the mayor's budget office.

City Council Budget Committee Chairman Eric Costello voted to eliminate all funding to the Mayor's Bureau of Budget and Management.

"We made numerous attempts to work with them over the last few months. They knew about the City Council's priorities, and they basically laughed at it and made it seem like a joke," Costello said.

Watch WBAL-TV 11 Adam May's report:

The City Council's priority is funding after-school and community school programs. Councilman Zeke Cohen said the council wants an additional $2.4 million.

"Our city's violence is at historic rates. We cannot cut from the programs that are keeping children safe right now," Cohen said.

Mayor Catherine Pugh made an unexpected stop by the City Council chambers after the vote on her budget staff's funding, telling 11 News that her track record on education and youth speaks for itself.

"Let me just say I also raised $3 million for schools privately. I raised $18 million to help young people work this summer, and another $75,000 just to jump start entrepreneurship in our city just among young people," Pugh said.

Negotiations are ongoing.