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Rewriting
LA County’s Story

LA County and community partners treat people with the dignity and respect they deserve.

And we connect people to the support they need: housing, health care, substance use treatment and lifesaving medications.

Healthcare workers, first responders, local leaders, people with lived experience – we all work together to help people who use drugs reach a healthy, stable and fulfilling life.

Hear the inspiring voices of our community as they share stories of healing and hope.
:15
“We’re restoring hope by hearing the stories, hearing the journeys, seeing the brilliance.”
Veronica, Norwalk
Community Leader
:30
“I want us to get to a place where when we see someone having a tough moment, we recognize their humanity is as valuable and irreplaceable as our own.”
Dr. Ricky, Los Angeles
Public Health Professor, USC
3:21
“I came into recovery again to do it for myself because I had realized I had to be there for myself in order to give my kids what they really needed in life. I have 11 and a half years clean.”
Renee, Norwalk
Mom, Grandma, former drug user
HOPICS Supervisor
:15
“Sin los servicios y la ayuda que estoy recibiendo yo estuviera muerta”.
Silvia. Sur de Los Ángeles
Madre, abuela, en recuperación del uso de drogas
:30
“Nos trataron como humanos, pues nos dieron esperanzas de vivir”.
Aurora, Tujunga
Madre, esposa, recuperada del uso de drogas.
Directora Asociada, Homeless Health Care Los Angeles
2:11
“Lo que yo quiero que la gente sepa de las personas que usan drogas es que son seres humanos”.
Luis, Lancaster
Jefe de Servicios, Mental Health America of Los Angeles

"We can identify because we’ve been there."

Rebecca O., Harm Reduction Worker.

Rebecca is a peer navigator at HOPICS, which provides housing, homelessness, and harm reduction services in and around South Los Angeles. Her own lived experience of homelessness and substance use gives her unique insight into the clients she supports every day.

“What we do is meet people where they are. Whether they’re in need of water, food, rest, if they need supplies, if they need anything that has to do with reducing harm to oneself. They can be who they are, they’re not going to be judged. We embrace them with love and compassion. We let them know, ‘Hey, you’re not alone. You’re seen. We see you.’”

“Everyone comes together and helps everyone out.”

Patricia F., Parent and Supporter.

Patricia is a teacher’s aide from Whittier. Her daughter is supported by Bienestar in East Los Angeles.

“It’s hard for a mother to have her child out in the streets with drugs and not knowing what is put in the drugs. The fentanyl testing strips she comes for, and the Narcan, they save people’s lives. The staff at Bienestar are very sweet and kind. This is a safe place for people to come and eat, chat, be warm, take a nap. The center helps the community by keeping people out of the street, keeping them safe, and making them feel like family.”

“I feel like a new person.”

Fernando M., Program Participant.

Fernando is in substance use recovery and is a regular visitor to the HOPICS health hub in South Los Angeles.

“This place has helped me so, so much. I don’t have words to express my gratitude. They’ve welcomed me with love and I’ve told them my life story. And it’s not easy for me to share that with just anyone. But I trust these people. And they trust me. And I earned back my family’s trust, and everyone else’s. Now I talk to everyone in society. Wherever I go, people smile at me. But before, it wasn’t like that. Before, they looked at me with fear. I was doing really bad. And now, honestly, I feel like I was reborn.”