Twenty four years later, the hope for the legalization of people who were brought up to the U.S. as children – many of them already profession…
On Tuesday morning, Congressman Robert Garcia and other local elected officials held a media briefing in front of the Bell Gardens City Hall t…
CHIRLA, an immigrant rights organization, reported to the L.A. City Council that more than 300 people have been detained by ICE, according to …
The House approved a bill funding for immigration enforcement and tax cuts that according to experts, will benefit the wealthy most and remove…
The Trump administration now requires that all undocumented people 14 years of age or older register with the federal government, but pro-immi…
“The disgraceful and unconstitutional deportation of American citizens of Mexican descent in the 1930s happened here, right here,” said Letici…
The“Come Walk with Me” is dedicated to the Latino communities of Los Angeles County. Photo courtesy of Jade Blairs.
A new report released in June by the office of California’s attorney general and the California Department of Justice stated that hate crimes in the state have had a 20% surge, from 1,763 hate crimes in 2021 to 2,120 in 2022. Latinos are of the group most targeted by hate. To uplift the Latino community and remind everyone that there is no space for hate in LA, the city of El Monte revealed “Come walk with Me,” a new mural.
The Los Angeles County Board of Supervisors adopted the county’s final $46.7 billion budget. Despite the billion-dollar budget the Immigrants are LA (IRLA) coalition believes the immigrant community and its needs are not rightfully represented in this budget. IRLA wants to ensure that the approximately 3.5 million immigrants living in LA, the majority of them being Latinos, are a visible, integral and permanent part of the county’s budget process.
