Justice LA Statement on LA County’s COVID Surge & Pretrial Incarceration
Justice LA Coalition members, and the Coalition as a whole, have spoken loud and clear since the inception of COVID-19 about the necessity of
Read MoreJustice LA Coalition members, and the Coalition as a whole, have spoken loud and clear since the inception of COVID-19 about the necessity of
Read MoreLOS ANGELES – We congratulate Los Angeles County District Attorney George Gascón for beginning his tenure with sweeping changes that seek to redress harms
Read MoreJusticeLA, along with over 40 local and statewide advocacy groups, demand immediate action from Los Angeles County leadership in response to the threat of
Read MoreAfrican-Americans/Blacks
30%
Latinos
50%
Mental Illness
30%
Women of color
72%
Black Males
Latino Males
Women of Color
Suffering From Mental Illness
“I love Los Angeles. This is my home. We can't continue to cave into institutions built from white supremacy. We all need come forward like JusticeLA has dared to do and imagine a society without cages and make visible the stories of those who are deemed undeserving of justice.”
Co-Founder of the Immigrant Youth Coalition
"The time to reinvest from a broken jail system with a declining population to opportunity and prevention is now. Let’s create a 21st century safety net that links innovative job training programs with gainful employment, re-entry support, mental health and drug treatment centers so that we can bring hope and opportunity."
Community Coalition, President & CEO
"Los Angeles is one of the greatest cities in the world because of the unique culture, intelligence, enthusiasm and love that Black, Brown and Indigenous people offer--despite surviving through structural poverty and state violence. We want to see Los Angeles appreciate our contributions by spending that $3.5 billion on revamping care and culture in our communities---not on more cages."
Californians United for a Responsible Budget (CURB), Co-Statewide Coordinator
"Working on this campaign gives us an opportunity to learn from other cities like New York and their campaign to close Rikers and the Bay Area's successful campaign to stop public money from being spent on more punishment. Los Angeles is a vast and unique county, so we'll learn and innovate new strategies and tactics. We'll be able to share what we've learned with the next city or county that wants to redirect public monies away from punishment and into supporting the health and wellness of our communities."
Filmmaker
"JusticeLA is a growing movement of nonprofits, labor unions, businesses, civil rights organizations, faith-based institutions, artists, research entities and formerly incarcerated youth, women and men committed to challenging Los Angeles' over reliance on punishment. Our plan is simple: let's redirect and reinvest resources into community-based health services and alternatives."
Revolve Impact, Co-Founder
"If substance use treatment had been readily available in my community, my father would not have been incarcerated and my family would not have had to suffer homelessness from losing our primary wage earner. $3.5 billion dollars invested in community-based alternatives to incarceration can mean that a family like mine stays together.”
Californians United for a Responsible Budget (CURB), Co-Statewide Coordinator
This will be the first time in Los Angeles history that groups across sector are coming together to oppose this 3.5 billion dollar jail plan. Angelenos have the opportunity to build a Los Angeles we can raise our children in. We need our elected officials to protect Black and Brown communities by reinvesting dollars into healthcare, public education and healthy food--not jails and prisons."
Black Lives Matter & Dignity & Power Now, Co-Founder
L.A. County, the current jail capital of the world, is planning to spend $3.5 billion to build two new jails in our back yard.
The JusticeLA Coalition is standing together as one voice to call for a moratorium on jail construction in L.A. County and to urge the Board of Supervisors to reimagine our collective future.
JusticeLA is calling for a moratorium on jail construction in order to fully realize the promise of diversion and re-entry through a justice reinvestment strategy for Los Angeles.
Tell us what how you’d spend $3.5 billion in your community?
Youth Centers
Single Family Homes
Assisted Living Facilities for the Mentally Ill
Transitional Apartments for Homeless
JusticeLA’s Jail Bed Drop project was a creative intervention on Christmas Eve meant to bring attention to families separated by incarceration during the holiday season and encourage a public conversation about the fight for abolition. Artists used over 50 jail beds as a canvas, transformed them, created and recreated with them–and in some cases, destroyed them as symbols of what we envision.
L.A. County is looking to build two new jails with nearly 6,000 beds. Beds are supposed to be where we sleep, where we dream. Jail beds represent trauma, shame, torture, and death. We demand an end to mass incarceration in the U.S. and to L.A. County’s investment in policing and jails and we envision a new, freer and more just world.
We’re JusticeLA.
JusticeLA was born in the Fall of 2017 from the community based advocacy of countless families separated by the largest jail system in the world. In partnership with grassroots organizations, advocates, directly impacted communities, and stakeholders, we work to reduce the footprint of incarceration by stoping jail expansion and reclaiming, reimagining and reinvesting dollars away from incarceration and into community-based systems of care. Since our launch, we have successfully stopped LA County’s $3.5 billion jail expansion plan and lead the development of LA County’s Alternatives to Incarceration Workgroup report.
Californians United for Responsible Budget (CURB)
Color of Change
Critical Resistance Los Angeles
Dignity and Power Now
Essie Justice Group
Frontline Wellness Network
Gender Justice LA
La Defensa
Million Dollar Hoods
White People 4 Black Lives
The Youth Justice Coalition
Does your organization want to link up with JusticeLA? Join us!
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ACLU of Southern California
Alliance of Californians for Community Empowerment (ACCE)
AWARE-LA
Black Community Clergy and Labor Alliance
Black Lives Matter: Los Angeles
Blackout for Human Rights
California Calls
California Partnership
California Immigrant Policy Center
California Immigrant Youth Justice Alliance
Californians United for a Responsible Budget (CURB)
Center for Popular Democracy
CLUE: Clergy and Laity United for Economic Justice
Code Pink
Cornerstone Theatre Company
Critical Resistance LA
Defend Movement
Drug Policy Alliance
Fair Chance Project
Garment Worker Center
Gender Justice LA
Homies Unidos
Immigrant Youth Coalition-San Gabriel Valley
Immigrant Youth Coalition-Free The People Network
Jobs R 4 U
Justice Environmental Coalition
JusticeNotJails
Justice Warriors 4 Black Lives
LA CAN (Los Angeles Community Action Network)
LA VOICE
Liberty Tree Foundation for the Democratic Revolution
March And Rally Los Angeles
March for Racial Justice
National Day Laborer Organizing Network
ONE WAY UP
Our Revolution Los Angeles
Presente
Restore the Delta
SEIU
SEIU USWW
Stop LAPD Spying Coalition
The Labor Community Strategy Center
United Way of Greater Los Angeles
USC Race and Equity Center
White People 4 Black Lives / SURJ Affiliate Los Angeles
The JusticeLA Coalition is standing together with one voice to issue our own call to action to the Los Angeles County Board of Supervisors that reimagines our collective future and launches the JusticeLA campaign, with our own flavor.