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The Brief

The most important stories for you to know today
  • Vendors impacted by ICE raids to receive aid
    Street vendors peeling nopales to customers.
    Street vendors along Cesar Chavez Avenue prepare fruits and nopales to customers.

    Topline:

    A coalition of immigrant rights and street vendor advocacy organizations has launched a fundraiser to support vendors struggling with the economic fallout from recent immigration enforcement activity across Los Angeles.

    Why it matters: Since immigration raids ramped up, street vendors— many of whom sell raspados, fresh fruit or hot foods– have seen their customer base shrink dramatically, mirroring the drop in business in Boyle Heights and the greater Eastside.

    How to support: According to GoFundMe,100% of donations will go to street vendors, to help cover essentials like food, supplies or rent. As of Tuesday afternoon, the fundraiser has accumulated more than $21,000 of its $300,000 goal. 

    Read on... for more details about the fund.

    This story was originally published by Boyle Heights Beat on June 17, 2025.

    A coalition of immigrant rights and street vendor advocacy organizations has launched a fundraiser to support vendors struggling with the economic fallout from recent immigration enforcement activity across Los Angeles.

    The L.A. Street Vendor Solidarity Fund was spearheaded by Inclusive Action for the City, East L.A. Community Corporation, Public Counsel and Community Power Collective.

    The fund aims to provide direct aid to vendors experiencing severe income loss amid the looming threat of deportation.

    Since immigration raids ramped up, street vendors— many of whom sell raspados, fresh fruit or hot foods– have seen their customer base shrink dramatically, mirroring the drop in business in Boyle Heights and the greater Eastside.

    According to a GoFundMe page organized by Inclusive Action, the goal is to raise resources “as the crisis continues and until ICE ends the raids.”

    “These incidents have spread fear throughout Los Angeles,” the GoFundMe page reads. “Street vendors are afraid to work, and those that are risking vending in our communities are faced with little foot traffic. For many vendors, even one day of lost wages will mean they will not be able to put food on their families’ tables or pay their rent.”

    Sergio Jimenez, a senior organizer for Community Power Collective, a local group that advocates for street vendors, tenants and transit riders, said threats of deportation are chilling the open-air market.

    “We’re talking about a huge pool of individuals who are all facing the same dilemma – fear of going out, risking not selling anything and the investment with the inflation is just massive. So we created this fund to hopefully support as much as we can during this crisis, and also figure out ways to jumpstart a bit of their safety on this,” he said

    While the application process is being finalized, the fund will eventually be open to vendors across L.A. County. Previous fundraising efforts by the same coalition have distributed hundreds of dollars to eligible applicants, though the final amount of aid for street vendors has yet to be determined, Jimenez said.

    “We’re trying to raise as much funds as possible to be able to help as many people as possible. Leimert Park vendors, Valley folks, swap meet individuals. We’re trying to make it as flexible as possible, but as long as they are street vendors in general, that’s always been our criteria,” Jimenez said.

    According to GoFundMe,100% of donations will go to street vendors, to help cover essentials like food, supplies or rent. As of Tuesday afternoon, the fundraiser has accumulated more than $21,000 of its $300,000 goal.

    The coalition of groups has organized successful community fundraisers in the past, including a campaign to raise money to support vendors during the COVID-19 pandemic and open-air economy workers, such as gardeners and street vendors, affected by the L.A. wildfires earlier this year.

    Between January and April alone, more than 5,000 workers received one-time payments to help offset the financial setbacks they experienced.

  • Authorities say gunman traveled from California
    Two people in camouflage FBI uniforms speak to two men in police uniforms in front of a home with a white fence.
    FBI personnel confer with Torrance police officers on the street of the house connected to Cole Tomas Allen, the shooting suspect at the White House Correspondents' Dinner late Saturday.

    Topline:

    The man arrested in connection to the shooting at the White House Correspondents Dinner Saturday night was identified as Cole Allen by two sources familiar with the matter. The sources spoke to NPR on condition of anonymity because they were not authorized to speak publicly.

    What happened: The shooting took place outside the ballroom at the Washington Hilton where the dinner was underway. President Donald Trump and other top officials were safely evacuated.

    About the alleged gunman: Todd Blanche, the acting U.S. Attorney General, told Meet the Press on Sunday morning that they believed the gunman was targeting "administration officials," but didn't want to be more specific since the investigation was still underway. He also said investigators believed the gunman had traveled to D.C. from California via train and was staying at the hotel with two firearms.

    Read on... for statements from local schools about connections to a "Cole Allen."

    The man arrested in connection with the shooting at the White House Correspondents' Dinner Saturday night was identified as Cole Allen by two sources familiar with the matter. The sources spoke to NPR on condition of anonymity because they were not authorized to speak publicly.

    Shooting details

    A man points as he climbs on stage. Other men in suits surround an older man in a tux.
    Health and Human Services Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr., third from left, is taken out of the ballroom by security agents during a shooting incident at the annual White House Correspondents' Association Dinner.
    (
    Andrew Harnik
    /
    Getty Images
    )

    The shooting took place outside the ballroom at the Washington Hilton, where the dinner was underway. President Donald Trump on Saturday released what appears to be video surveillance footage that shows a man quickly moving past security officials, who then draw their weapons. Trump, who was safely evacuated with his wife, Melania, and other top officials, also shared images via his Truth Social account late Saturday of a shirtless man detained on the floor of the hotel.

    Todd Blanche, the acting U.S. Attorney General, told Meet the Press on Sunday morning that they believed the gunman was targeting "administration officials," but didn't want to be more specific since the investigation was still underway. He said the targets "likely" included the president.

    He also said investigators believed the gunman had traveled to D.C. from California via train and was staying at the hotel with two firearms. Blanche said the man purchased those firearms within the last couple of years.

    At a news conference following the shooting, Jeffery Carroll of D.C.'s Metropolitan Police said that the suspect said the suspect "was armed with a shotgun, a handgun and multiple knives."

    Jeanine Pirro, U.S. Attorney for the District of Columbia, said at that same news briefing that the gunman would face federal charges. Authorities say the man will be charged Monday.

    What we know about the gunman's SoCal ties

    Two people in camouflage FBI uniforms speak to two men in police uniforms in front of a home with a white fence.
    FBI personnel confer with Torrance police officers on the street of the house connected to Cole Tomas Allen, the shooting suspect at the White House Correspondents' Dinner late Saturday.
    (
    Robbin Goddard
    /
    Los Angeles Times via Getty Images
    )

    The FBI searched a home connected to Allen in Torrance late Saturday.

    According to a LinkedIn profile under his name, Allen obtained a bachelor's degree in mechanical engineering from the California Institute of Technology in 2017, and a master's degree in computer science from California State University, Dominguez Hills in 2025.

    The profile also says that one of his employers is C2 Education, a tutoring and college test prep center with a location in Torrance, where he was named "Teacher of the Month" in a December 2024 post.

    A search of California's Commission on Teacher Credentialing did not surface a credentialed teacher by that name.

    Statements from local schools

    As news reports spread identifying the gunman as a California teacher from Torrance, the Torrance Unified School District said in a statement Saturday night that the alleged gunman is not an employee of the school district and has never worked there.

    "While details are still emerging and facts remain under investigation, early reports have referenced a teacher from Torrance as being involved," the statement from Torrance Unified said. "We want to clarify that the individual named in the news is not an employee of the Torrance Unified School District and has never worked in our district."

    Cal State Dominguez Hills, in a statement, said a man with the name of the alleged gunman had graduated from the school in 2025, but could not confirm if it was the same person.

    "A student named Cole Allen graduated with a master’s degree from California State University, Dominguez Hills in 2025. The university cannot confirm if this is the same suspect identified in the April 25 shooting at the White House Correspondents’ Dinner," the statement said.

    Caltech also said it had not independently confirmed the alleged gunman was the same person who attended their university.

    "An undergraduate student by the name of Cole Allen graduated from Caltech in 2017," university officials said in a statement. "Based on media reports, we are aware that federal authorities have identified a suspect by the name of Cole Allen in the April 25 shooting incident at the Washington Correspondents’ Dinner. We do not have details from the investigation to confirm that the suspect and our undergraduate alumnus are the same person."

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  • SGV grade school teaches math via the tile game
    A 5th grade girl with long hair and glasses holds up a mahjong tile in class.
    Fifth grader Abigail Lam is one of 16 students in a mahjong math club at Bella Vista Elementary in Monterey Park. Behind her are second grader Josephine Lam and fourth grader Lucas Wong.

    Topline:

    Bella Vista Elementary School in Monterey Park is giving its after-class math club a different spin — by using mahjong.

    How? It’s teaching fourth and fifth graders pattern recognition, strategy and probability through the traditional Chinese tile game.

    Why now? The mahjong math club is the brainchild of fourth grade teacher Andy Luong, who learned how to play the game a couple years ago. In figuring out how to play the game, he learned how to teach it.

    The math club at Bella Vista Elementary School is not a quiet affair — not with more than a dozen 10- and 11-year-olds stacking sets of mahjong.

    But before the games can begin, it's time for math lessons.

    "Remind me, math is the study of what?" fourth grade teacher Andy Luong asks the class.

    "Pattern, patterns," the kids say.

    Luong clicks through several slides, each featuring a mahjong tile the students call "seven sticks."

     "When you first learned this tile, what did you use to memorize this?" Luong, co-founder of the Mahjong Math Club, asks.

    "They look like sticks," a boy says.

    Luong locks in on a slide for a few seconds, just a flash. It features six tiles, divided into two rows. He asks the class how many tiles they see.

     "Three on the top and three on the bottom," a girl says. " So when I saw the pattern, I was like, 'Oh, it's six.'"

    Luong nods. " Recognizing those patterns are a lot faster than counting 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6," he says.

    The game that never goes out of style

    The tile game of mahjong is believed to have started in China in the 19th century, after decades if not centuries of evolution. It spread globally, adopting regional specificities, including in the U.S. after it landed in the late 1910s from Shanghai by way of an American businessman. A few decades later, a group of Jewish American women established the National Mah Jongg League in New York.

    The game never stopped being a staple of Chinese and many Asian cultures — anywhere in the world.

    A sign in Chinese and English. It says "Intergenerational Mahjong Series 2025"
    Intergenerational Mahjong is a monthly series held in Monterey Park, one of many new mahjong social clubs in L.A.
    (
    Fiona Ng
    /
    LAist
    )

    In recent years, fueled in part by the COVID-19 shutdown, an interest in the game has sparked among young Asian Americans. They form or attend social clubs in L.A. dedicated to the pastime, creating their own bond with the game.

    Luong is one of them. When he was growing up in Illinois, the game came with certain connotations.

    " Mahjong has such a bad rap in the Asian American community," Luong said, who moved to the San Gabriel Valley about a decade ago. "Part of a big reason why my parents don't play is because they associate it with gambling."

    The 30-year-old finally gave the game a spin in 2024, learning it from third grade teacher and math club co-founder Rachel Hwang. She cut her teeth by watching her family play. Naturally, she threw Luong in the deep end.

    " I was like, 'Here, we're just gonna play,'" Hwang said. " I just put the tiles on."

    "I was so overwhelmed. It's like, 'What do you mean I had to get a set? A set of how much?' I'm like, 'I don't know what I'm doing,'" he said.

    Still, Luong fell head over heels, quickly becoming a regular at the mahjong social clubs (in fact, it was at one of those events where I first met him) and a student of the game.

    In learning it, Luong figured out how to teach it.

    A Latino woman in glasses with long brown hair inside an office.
    Principal Jennifer Martinez of Bella Vista Elementary in Monterey Park
    (
    Fiona Ng
    /
    LAist
    )

    "He was the one [that] as a learner didn't grow up playing this game," Hwang said. "He was the one that found the tutorials, watched the tutorials, and he really, from a learner's perspective, figured out what a kid needed to learn and how they needed to learn in order to play the game."

    Last year, Luong submitted a proposal to start a math club focused on mahjong at the school.

    " It was pretty much slam dunk. It explores other avenues of the cultural experience that we want our students to learn," said Jennifer Martinez,  principal of Bella Vista Elementary School.  "It was something that we wanted to get off the ground right away and support."

    Since September, the club has been meeting on Tuesday and Thursday afternoons. It was so popular Luong and Hwang brought in help to run the club.

    “ I don't feel like they're really doing math,” said Ruolin Chen, a kindergarten teacher who was recruited. "It's like they're learning from playing or playing from learning.”

    Let the games begin

    Back in the classroom, Luong clicks to a last slide to remind the club how to maximize "points" with certain "hands." This semester, the club is playing Hong Kong style mahjong — three point minimum win.

    Finally, it's game time. The group of mainly fourth and fifth graders take their seats at the tables: mixing the tiles, stacking them into starting formation, casting the die, so on and so forth.

    Then, they build their hand, meticulously rearranging the 13 tiles according to their suits — or in math club parlance, patterns.

    The clank of tiles and sounds of "pong" and "gong" soon fill the air.

    Pattern recognition, strategy, situational awareness, probability, learning when to pivot or to fold — those are some of the learnings the math club intends.

    "Andy is so structured," Hwang said of Luong's design of the club. " The first two weeks, they didn't even play a game. It was like, 'Let's look at the tiles. How many tiles do you see? Pick out and group them into sets.'"

    Fifth grader Uma Alvarado shows me her hand. She's going all "pong" — trying to assemble four sets of three identical tiles. It'd be worth three points if she wins.

    Alvarado says what brings her to the club is the opportunity to hang out with her schoolmates. But trying something new is pretty cool too.

    "I get to mix the tiles and find new ways to play a game I have never been introduced to before," she adds.

    At another table, fourth grader Bonnie Kuang says the game keeps her on her toes.

    "I think it's fun to use different strategies, and maybe I need to change strategy mid-game," Kuang said. "And I like it when I win."

    Sofia Mandic, her same grade classmate and opponent across the table, says the pace of the game makes quick tile recognition key.

    "You need to think fast. You need to think to yourself if you need it or not," Mandic says, because oftentimes, there are just seconds to make a decision.

    Bringing mahjong into the classroom

    Pattern recognition, strategy, situational awareness, probability, learning when to pivot or to fold — those are some of the learnings the math club intends.

    "Andy is so structured," Hwang said of Luong's design of the club. " The first two weeks, they didn't even play a game. It was like, 'Let's look at the tiles. How many tiles do you see? Pick out and group them into sets.'"

    It's all part of a teaching method known as "counting collections" that focuses on hands-on, student-centered learning experiences to build informal math knowledge. It's one aspect of a body of research called Cognitively Guided Instruction, which all math teachers at Bella Vista are trained in. Luong is applying it to guide his approach.

    " We need to have them see there's four different types of tiles. There's [Chinese] characters, there's sticks, circles, and there's honorary tiles," Luong said. "They're not going to know unless they actually see it and they use their hands."

    Even then, it's a lot to process. It could be downright overwhelming when a kid has to juggle all the elements all at once during game play.

    "The very first time that we actually started playing, some of them didn't finish a game. It took an entire period," Luong said.

    It took about a month into the club before the mechanics of the game — things like drawing a tile, discarding the ones they don't want — became routine; and another two months for the kids to play faster and without supervision.

    Three people -- two Asian women and one Asian man -- posing in front of a TV in a classroom.
    Teachers Rachel Hwang, Ruolin Chen and Andy Luong. They run the Mahjong Math Club at Bella Vista Elementary in Monterey Park.
    (
    Fiona Ng
    /
    LAist
    )

    "A lot of the students who don't know Mandarin, or have any Chinese background, are starting to recognize the characters. I'm really proud to say that," Luong said.

    Ultimately, the teachers want the kids to take away from the game a lesson about life.

    "What we really want the kids to do is not to have such a fixed mindset," Luong said.

    " We want them to, A) be flexible, B) change up your game plan," Hwang said. "It's OK. Life is going to throw curve balls at you."

  • Gunfire heard at White House Correspondents' event

    Topline:

    President Donald Trump was reported uninjured after a possible shooting at the White House Correspondents' Dinner tonight in Washington, D.C., the Associated Press says. Secret Service agents said a suspect is in custody.

    What we know: What sounded like gunshots were heard by gathered reporters shortly after 8:30 p.m. ET in the Washington Hilton. Several guests were seen fleeing the ballroom where hundreds of journalists, politicians and attendees were gathered — including Trump, Vice President Vance and other members of the administration.

    Trump's response: He is expected to appear at a press briefing shortly. He praised Secret Service after being rushed from the ballroom.

    Updated April 26, 2026 at 11:13 AM ET

    President Trump and the first lady are uninjured after a shooting at the White House Correspondents' Dinner on Saturday in Washington, D.C. A suspect is in custody, according to a statement from the U.S. Secret Service.

    In remarks from the White House after the incident, the president said a Secret Service agent is "doing great" after being shot in a bulletproof vest. The Secret Service said the incident took place at a security screening area inside the Washington Hilton hotel near the entrance to the main ballroom where the event was taking place. There are no reports of further injuries.

    The suspect has been identified as Cole Allen, according to two sources familiar with the matter. The sources spoke on condition of anonymity because they were not authorized to speak publicly.

    Trump shared surveillance footage online which appears to show law enforcement reacting to an assailant sprinting through an area of the hotel. He also posted pictures of a man, shirtless, with his eyes closed lying face down on a carpet.

    Cole is being charged with using a firearm during a crime of violence and assault on a federal officer using a dangerous weapon, with more charges likely, according to Jeanine Pirro, the U.S. Attorney for the District of Columbia.

    At a law enforcement press conference, Jeffery Carroll of DC's Metropolitan Police said that the suspect "was armed with a shotgun, a handgun and multiple knives." Law enforcement said they believe the suspect was a guest at the hotel.

    He was evaluated at a local hospital after the incident and was not hit by gunfire, according to law enforcement.

    Getty Images photographer Andrew Harnik takes photos as a security official points his weapon after an incident at the annual White House Correspondents' Association Dinner.
    (
    Chip Somodevilla
    /
    Getty Images
    )

    A chaotic scene

    Gunshots were heard by gathered reporters shortly after 8:30 p.m. ET. Several guests were seen fleeing the ballroom where hundreds of journalists, politicians and attendees were gathered — including Trump, Vice President Vance and other members of the administration.

    Video from inside the room showed security quickly clear the guests on the main stage — including the president and first lady. Someone can be heard shouting "stay down."

    President Trump took to social media shortly after being rushed out to praise the Secret Service.

    Health and Human Services Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr. is taken out of the ballroom by security agents during a shooting incident at the annual White House Correspondents Association Dinner.
    (
    Andrew Harnik
    /
    Getty Images
    )

    "Quite an evening in D.C. Secret Service and Law Enforcement did a fantastic job. They acted quickly and bravely. The shooter has been apprehended," Trump wrote.

    The president said in a later post that all cabinet members are safe.

    "I said earlier tonight that journalism is a public service, because when there is an emergency, we run to the crisis, not away from it. And on a night when we are thinking about the freedoms in the First Amendment, we must also think about how fragile they are," Weijia Jiang, the president of the correspondents' association, said. "I saw all of you reporting, and that's what we do. Thank God everybody's safe and and thank you for coming together tonight. We will do this again."

    First lady Melania Trump and President Trump were sitting next to each other just before they were rushed out of the ballroom at the Washington Hilton.
    (
    Tom Brenner
    /
    AP
    )

    Several members of Congress were seen leaving the event by foot, including Sen. Sheldon Whitehouse, D-R.I., and Rep. Jared Moskowitz, D-Fla.

    "I said earlier tonight that journalism is a public service, because when there is an emergency, we run to the crisis, not away from it. And on a night when we are thinking about the freedoms in the First Amendment, we must also think about how fragile they are," Weijia Jiang, the president of the correspondents' association, said. "I saw all of you reporting, and that's what we do. Thank God everybody's safe and and thank you for coming together tonight. We will do this again."

    Attacks on Trump and the press

    Both the president and members of the press have been targeted for violence in recent years.

    During his 2024 reelection effort, Trump was injured in a shooting at a July rally in Pennsylvania when a bullet whizzed past his head, grazing his ear. Two attendees were wounded, and rally-goer and former fire chief Corey Comperatore was killed.

    A Secret Service sniper shot and killed the perpetrator.

    In September 2024, a Secret Service agent saw a man holding a semi-automatic rifle hidden in the tree line at Trump International in West Palm Beach. The suspect fled in his car and was arrested a short time later.

    White House Correspondents Association President and CBS Senior White House Correspondent Weijia Jiang pauses while coming back to the stage to speak after a shooting incident at the annual White House Correspondents Association Dinner.
    (
    Andrew Harnik
    /
    Getty Images
    )

    He was later sentenced to life in prison.

    During the Jan. 6, 2021, riot at the U.S. Capitol building, more than a dozen journalists were attacked in targeted assaults by rioters, according to a tally by the Freedom of the Press foundation. "Murder the media" was etched into a doorway during the attack.

    In 2018, a man mailed pipe bombs to people and organizations he perceived to be critics of Donald Trump, including CNN offices in New York and Atlanta. He was sentenced to 20 years in prison.

    The Washington Hilton, which played host to Saturday's dinner, is also the site of past political violence — in 1981, President Reagan was shot and seriously wounded outside of the hotel.

    Three others were also injured in the attack, including Reagan's press secretary James Brady, who sustained brain damage and was permanently disabled in the attack. He became a gun control activist, successfully lobbying alongside his wife Sarah Brady for a background check system for firearm sales.

    The White House Press Briefing Room, where Trump made brief remarks after the incident, was later renamed in his honor.

    Deepa Shivaram and Ryan Lucas contributed to this report.

    Copyright 2026 NPR

  • Youth artists are behind MacArthur Park artwork
    A large mural depicts fruit on a tree with a diverse group of people around the base.
    "Roots of Our Labor" mural is now in place at the UCLA James Lawson Jr. Worker Justice Center in Westlake near MacArthur Park.

    Topline:

    “Roots of Our Labor,” a new mural unveiled this week by LA Commons across the street from MacArthur Park.


    About the project: Led by artists Luis Mateo and Shakir Manners, the mural draws from stories collected by youth artists in a yearlong process from more than 75 residents in and around MacArthur Park.

    What they created: The mural shows a tree bearing avocados and oranges, with a trunk made of intertwined hands and a farmer harvesting the fruit. On one side, a tamale vendor is depicted selling food, and on the other, an ice cream vendor pushes a cart as children gather around him. In the background, scenes from MacArthur Park play out. 

    Before they ever picked up a paintbrush, youth artists behind a new mural in MacArthur Park started by listening.

    “We interviewed people in MacArthur Park about their experiences living in the community,” said Tania Castro, a recent high school graduate and one of 20 young artists who worked on the project. “Some stories were a little bit sad because they said they lost their jobs and they need more opportunities.”

    Those conversations shaped “Roots of Our Labor,” a new mural unveiled this week by LA Commons across the street from MacArthur Park. The project, led by artists Luis Mateo and Shakir Manners, draws from stories collected in a yearlong process from more than 75 residents in and around MacArthur Park.

    Castro says those stories were about more than struggle.

    “They also said they loved the community. In the park, you can see a lot of vendors selling things like fruit and ice cream,” she said. “And the kids love it.”

    A group of young people poses on the ground below a large mural on the side of a building.
    Youth artists and members of LA Commons pose for a photo in front of the "Roots of our labor" mural during its unveiling event on Thursday, April 23, in MacArthur Park.
    (
    Hanna Kang
    /
    The LA Local
    )

    The mural shows a tree bearing avocados and oranges, with a trunk made of intertwined hands and a farmer harvesting the fruit. On one side, a tamale vendor is depicted selling food, and on the other, an ice cream vendor pushes a cart as children gather around him. In the background, scenes from MacArthur Park play out. 

    In a neighborhood where ongoing immigration raids have fueled fear and instability, and where MacArthur Park is often defined by visible homelessness and crime, organizers said the mural is intended to highlight the diverse communities who live there and to frame the park as a shared space of connection, culture and daily life.

    “I enjoyed making it because it really teaches us about the importance of community and being more inclusive and kind to each other,” said high school artist Leslie Gonzalez. “Most of the people we talked to told us about their backgrounds and they weren’t that pleasant but they still pushed through and got together for each other.”

    Painted in March at the Central American Resource Center (CARECEN), the mural is installed on the southeastern side of the UCLA James Lawson Jr. Worker Justice Center.

    “Immigrants are critical to the community, especially here in MacArthur Park,” said Beth Peterson, community arts program director at LA Commons. “And I think the mural does a beautiful job of really sharing that story. It really shows how the hands of immigrants have really hung together to form this very beautiful community that we live in today.” 

    A diverse group of people gather around a vendor with an ice cream cart.
    Detail of "Roots of Our Labor" mural at UCLA James Lawson Jr. Worker Justice Center. The mural celebrates workers in the Westlake community.
    (
    Courtesy LA Commons
    )

    For the lead artists, working alongside youth was central to how the art took shape.

    “This artwork honors both the neighborhood and the people who shape it,” Mateo said. “Working with youth was essential to the process, allowing the mural to emerge from shared reflection rather than a single perspective.”

    The new mural builds on LA Commons’ ongoing work in the area, following another mural unveiled last September at MacArthur Park Elementary School. “Roots of Our Labor” is the organization’s second mural supported by Stop the Hate, a statewide initiative led by the Asian American and Pacific Islander community aimed at addressing hate incidents and promoting cross-cultural understanding.

    LA Commons, a nonprofit arts organization that creates community-based public art projects through partnerships and a mix of public and private funding, has been in the MacArthur Park area for more than 20 years. Its first public art project in the neighborhood was in 2003. “Roots of Our Labor” is its 22nd public art project in MacArthur Park.

    A man with dark-tone skin holds an oversized avocado while reaching for an orange.
    Detail of "Roots of Our Labor" mural at UCLA James Lawson Jr. Worker Justice Center. The mural celebrates workers in the Westlake community.
    (
    Courtesy LA Commons)
    )

    Manners, the artist, described the mural as a reflection of what he sees as the underlying spirit of MacArthur Park.

    It represents “the unseen hands that sustain communities, emphasizing that true progress is built collectively through persistence, sacrifice and shared purpose,” he said.

    For Gonzalez, the mural is personal as well as something tied closely to her community.

    “I feel like a light has shone on me and I’m proud of it because I’ve never done anything this big before,” she said. 

    The post New mural celebrates labor, multicultural community around MacArthur Park appeared first on LA Local.