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The MLK Day Parade is Monday
In just four days, the Los Angeles Official Martin Luther King Day Parade will take over South L.A.
The LA Local recently spoke with Sabra Wady, the parade’s lead organizer, who said this year’s parade will look much the same as recent years.
So, whether you’re attending the parade or watching it on TV, here’s everything you need to know about Monday’s parade:
The procession will begin at 10 a.m., with ABC7 set to begin a broadcast at 11 a.m.
What time does the parade start? How can I watch? Is anything happening after?
Wady said the best place to catch the parade in person is the intersection of Crenshaw Boulevard and Martin Luther King Jr. King Boulevard, or “camera corner,” where the parade will culminate and organizers are planning a live preshow. Bleacher seats, though, will be limited.
The Metro K Line runs directly to the intersection, dropping people off at the Martin Luther King Jr. Metro station.
Onlookers can also post up along the parade route with folding chairs and other self-arranged seating, Wady said.
The parade broadcast will run until 1 p.m., but Wady said the procession is expected to keep going until mid-afternoon.
“After the cameras stop rolling, it’s the people’s parade,” Wady said.
LA City Council President Marqueece Harris-Dawson and Councilmembers Curren Price and Heather Hutt – who represent council districts 8, 9 and 10, respectively — will organize the annual MLK Freedom Festival in the Leimert Park Plaza from 11 a.m. to 5 p.m.
What route will the parade take?
The route will remain the same, running down King Boulevard from Western Avenue to Crenshaw Boulevard before turning south down Crenshaw and heading to Leimert Park. Much of the route will be closed to traffic overnight before the parade.
More than 150 groups, including bands, floats, horseback riders and marchers, will trek down the boulevard. Wady said organizers cut off new sign-ups weeks ago in order to keep the parade manageable.
What will road closures look like?
Colin Sweeney, a spokesperson for the LA Department of Transportation, said in an email that the department will close off traffic down the main parade route overnight.
Here are the roads that will be closed to all vehicles for the duration of the parade and festival.
- King Boulevard from Vermont Avenue to Crenshaw Boulevard
- Crenshaw Boulevard from King Boulevard to 48th Street
- Leimert Boulevard from 8th Avenue to Leimert Park
- Degnan Avenue between 43rd Street and Leimert Park
Sweeney said only residents will be allowed to drive into the band of neighborhoods directly along the length of the parade route. That includes the blocks from 39th Street to 42nd Street along King Boulevard and the blocks between McClung Drive and Victoria Avenue along the Crenshaw closure.
The transportation department will allow traffic to cross the parade route at major intersections — including Western Avenue, Arlington Avenue and Stocker Street — but those crossings will be shut down at 10 a.m. All closed roads will stay blocked off until the parade and festival wrap up and transportation officials determine crowds have sufficiently dispersed, Sweeney said.
Wady said the parade is expected to peter out around mid-afternoon. The festival at Leimert Park Plaza is scheduled to end at 5 p.m.
Vehicles parked in the parade assembly area, parade route and disbanding area will be subject to impound or tickets, Sweeney wrote.