LA Street Vendors Receive Immediate Relief with Emergency Fund

LA Street Vendors Receive Immediate Relief with Emergency Fund

Los Angeles, CA. During the beginning months of the pandemic, Inclusive Action for the City has helped to provide immediate cash relief for small businesses and street vendors who were not eligible for government financial support. One hundred and twenty street vendors impacted by COVID-19 received $400 cash cards in early June through the Street Vendor Emergency Fund (see above).

For several decades, tens of thousands of street vendors have served the residents and tourists of Los Angeles despite the fact it was a criminalized practice in the city. It wasn’t until 2008 when they came together to legalize street vending with the help of the organizations that specialized in community development like East LA Community Corporation (ELACC).

Cash Cards for Street Vendors were much appreciated.

As street vendors started working with nonprofits, the Legalize Street Vending Campaign: Leadership for Urban Renewal Network (LURN) was created and focused on advocating for low-income communities, primarily concentrated with small businesses.

It wasn’t until a decade later that the long-term efforts of LURN and other committed communities paid off. Street vending became legal in November 2018, and low-income entrepreneurs were able to take control of their businesses and take care of their families without risking their livelihood.

LURN would eventually be renamed to Inclusive Action for the City and two years later, as COVID-19 became a predominant concern, there was a need for immediate relief for small, informal businesses.

“Inclusive Action is a lender, we provide small business loans to entrepreneurs,” said Inclusive Action’s executive director Rudy Espinoza, “many of our clients are street vendors, and they were coming in already anticipating that they were not going to be able to make their payments.”

Street vendors are not generally eligible for small business relief funds or other forms of government-sponsored financial support. Espinoza and his team were aware of this and heavily discussed in mid-March whether or not they should provide loans to those who were struggling with the quarantine. However, Inclusive Action decided against this action.

“We should not be doing loans to people right now that are struggling, but we need to get people cash,” Espinoza declared.

It was decided that the best way to help street vendors immediately was to distribute $400 cash cards (seen above) that could be withdrawn and used however the individual chooses. The decision allowed for the creation of the Street Vendor Emergency Fund with the collaboration of ELACC and Public Counsel.

1,032 street vendors were given immediate relief with the fund over the summer but Espinoza believes its “a drop in the bucket” to the much larger systemic issue of street vendors not being eligible for government benefits and having to rely on nonprofit organizations for relief during the pandemic.

“There should be more systems to protect vendors and take care of them during pandemics,” Espinoza said, “and the fact of the matter is that many of them have been struggling for a long time.”

There is hope for vendors to receive more immediate relief and support by the city as the Sidewalk Vending Pilot Program was recently passed by the LA County Board of Supervisors which will invest $1 million in assisting vendors with health-compliant equipment, education outreach, and other needs that will allow street vendors to safely sell in unincorporated areas of Los Angeles.

If you have the means to donate to Inclusive City for the City to continue working to help street vendors, click here.

From Inclusive Action for the City:

Inclusive Action addresses the root causes of poverty by merging good urban policy with sound economic development initiatives that reduce barriers, increase opportunity, strengthen local economies, and empower low-income residents and entrepreneurs across Los Angeles.

Our programs and initiatives seek to uplift those who face the most obstacles to social and economic opportunity. Inclusive Action empowers communities by prototyping innovative, scalable solutions that seek systems change, generating models that can be replicated and applied to all types of urban environments.

“Mayor’s Fund for LA” Angeleno Campaign Helps over 100 Thousands Residents

“Mayor’s Fund for LA” Angeleno Campaign Helps over 100 Thousands Residents

Los Angeles, CA. 105 thousand citizens of Los Angeles County have received help from the Mayor’s Fund for LA to do things like buy food and pay rent. FamilySource Centers also provided $1.2 million in grocery gift cards to nearly 10,000 Angelenos and all cards distributed in 3 days.

The Angeleno Campaign has helped counter major job losses as an emergency COVID-19 fundraising initiative launched with the collaboration of The Mayor’s Fund for Los Angeles, Accelerator for America, Mayor Eric Garcetti’s Office, and MasterCard City Possible to give immediate financial support for LA residents and families who have had unstable job security since early spring.

The non-profit Mayor’s Fund for LA started accepting applicants online for the relief during a three-day period starting on April 14th of this year.

LA Mayor Eric Garcetti reported that on the first day, shortly after the campaign was open to the public, more than 56,000 applicants had crashed the city’s application site. Garcetti would later announce that the total number increased to nearly 455,000 applications by the end of the three days (seen above).

Within the last four months of the fund being introduced to LA citizens, the Angeleno Program has raised more than $36 million through private donations made toward Mayor’s Fund for LA, which has helped nearly 105,000 LA residents. The money is distributed for an individual through a prepaid debit card if they signed up during the three-day application period.

The amount of money on the debit cards varied from $700 to $1,500 based on an applicant’s financial and economic situation.

The Angeleno Card Program indiscriminately assists the undocumented workers and unhoused residents of the city as it is designed to randomly select a validated applicant for the prepaid debit card.

“We are helping America’s cities fill critical gaps left by the federal response to the economic devastation caused by the pandemic,” said Garcetti in an Accelerator for America press release. “Immigrants and domestic workers are essential to our economy and our communities, and we will not get through this pandemic by leaving people behind.”

These posters are designed by Studio Number One for the LA Mask Print Project which was launched by Mayor Garcetti in early July to encourage the city’s citizens to wear masks.

Due to the program’s success in Los Angeles, Accelerator for America, alongside MasterCard City Possible, announced in late June that they would expand the program in ten different U.S. communities. The non-profit Accelerator, co-founded by the current LA mayor, announced in a press release that it was given a $750,000 grant by Open Society Foundation in support of the expansion of the Los Angeles program.

“I hope it inspires others who have those means or even two bucks,” said Mayor Garcetti during his April 16th briefing, “we need to get as many Angelenos covered in this crisis as we can.”

From Mayor’s Fund for Los Angeles:

The Mayor’s Fund for Los Angeles is a non-profit organization dedicated to improving life for all Angelenos. Uniquely positioned at the crossroads of local government, business, philanthropy, and the non-profit sector, the Fund facilitates the communication and collaboration vital to solving Los Angeles’ most complex challenges.

By leveraging the power of institutions and experts from across the city, the Fund helps create partnerships with the power to transform Los Angeles, making it a world leader in economic prosperity, efficiency, sustainability, and quality of life for all of its residents.

The Fund selects programs on the basis of their ability to engage public and private resources, demonstrate collaboration, seek innovative solutions, and yield measurable, transformational impact.

The Fund is supported by private donations and is overseen by an independent Board of Directors.