LA For All is an award-winning community focused, anti-hate and discrimination campaign to stand against hate and encourage our city to speak up and speak out to create a just and equitable Los Angeles.
The campaign meets at the intersection of art, advocacy, and community - and stands up for an inclusive LA. You will see this campaign on LA City parks, libraries, street banners, bus shelters, LA Metro bus & rail, our airports - and much more.
LA For All was created by five different Asian American and Pacific Islander (AAPI) artists to empower stories from our city through artwork, and to encourage the reporting of hate crimes and hate incidents. Even though this is a campaign to stop hate, it intentionally does not center hate as the subject of the campaign. Instead, we are using this space to empower our diverse communities and talk about what we stand for - belonging, inclusion and solidarity.
You can join the campaign, too! Stand with our City to overcome hate - neighbor to neighbor, community to community - in solidarity with vulnerable communities. In Los Angeles we include everyone. This is LA For All.
‘LA is for Everyone' is a multidimensional campaign that reflects the diverse mosaic of Los Angeles through bold design and clear calls to action in 21 languages: English, Spanish, Korean, Armenian, Arabic, Tagalog, Simplified Chinese, Traditional Chinese, Japanese, Thai, Vietnamese, Hindi, Khmer, Russian, Farsi, Hebrew, Amharic, Tigrinya, and Bangla, Punjabi, and ASL.
The LA Civil Rights Department developed the LA For All campaign in partnership with the Department of Public Works and the Department of Cultural Affairs. This campaign was made possible by Mayor Eric Garcetti, Councilmember John Lee, Councilmember Nithya Raman and Councilmember Mark Ridley-Thomas, the Bureau of Engineering, the Bureau of Street Lighting, the Department of Sanitation and Environment, the Department of Transportation, the Los Angeles Public Library, the Department of Water and Power, Los Angeles World Airports, Information Technology Agency, the Department of Neighborhood Empowerment, the Economic Workforce Development Department, and many more.
If you, or someone you know, experienced a hate crime report it to 9-1-1, or calling the LAPD Tip Line at 877-529-3835. For hate incident, you can also report it to LAPD online. Reporting hate is important because it provides the City with accurate data, which can inform services. Visit their website for more information.