Building People Power
for Thriving Communities

A group of people holding protest signs with messages advocating for clean buses, community support over policing, and housing rights. The signs are written in English and Spanish, and there is a cardboard house model as part of the protest visuals.

We organize with tenants, street vendors and transit riders in communities of color to create a solidarity economy, win community control of land & housing, and form dignified public systems that facilitate a culture of radical care in Boyle Heights, East LA and the greater Los Angeles Metropolitan area.

Icon of a market stall with awning and bottles

Street Vendor Justice

Toward a solidarity economy

An economy that works to support the needs and well-being of the community, not to increase profits for the wealthy class. Each person's work is recognized and respected as a natural act of sustainability and health, and we all benefit from the fruits of this labor.

Community Land & Housing Justice

Toward community control of land and housing

We all want to have a safe, healthy and stable home, and to have autonomy in that space. Community members know what they need, they are the ones that have to deal with the current conditions in their space, and therefore must have the power to make decisions collectively about how to care for the neighborhood and the land it occupies.

Icon of a person next to a bus.

Transit Justice

Toward dignified public systems & spaces

We all deserve freedom of mobility – to get to work, to connect with the community, to enjoy public spaces. That is why we fight for a public transit system that is dignified, reliable, and accessible, and for public spaces that promote a culture of collective care.

Nurturing Transformation

Line drawing of a globe with three human figures in front of it.

Cultural Power

Embodying and re-membering interdependence

As members of immigrant communities of color, we have a wealth of diasporic cultural practices and traditions that formed before colonialism, and have persisted in spite of it ever since. Many of these practices facilitate interdependence and preserve cultural memory - something that directly opposes white supremacy, capitalism, patriarchy and many of the other oppressive systems that were born out of colonialism & US Imperialism. 

By recognizing, learning about, investing in, and intentionally wielding our collective cultural power, we can challenge the systems that harm our communities, and sharpen our ability to self-govern in a way that promotes interdependence and care.

Blue icon of a megaphone with speech bubbles

Narrative Power

Our stories for our futures

We have the power and responsibility to affect narratives about specific issues that impact us as well as influence a broader worldview. By engaging the lived experiences of our members in our narrative work, we can tell stories that build awareness & solidarity, shift public perception, and inform policies that impact our communities.

To transform our communities away from a culture of white-supremacist capitalist patriarchy & toward a culture of radical care and interdependence, it is imperative to amplify the lived experiences and expertise of those most marginalized by these systems.

Icon of three people at a podium

Member Power

Our orientation to politics in practice

Our members are active in local, state-wide, and national coalitions that are at the forefront of transforming conditions for working class, immigrant, and communities of color. We prioritize the development of our base membership and member leaders through three important areas: political education, skills training, and participatory, democratic practice.

As our members learn to contextualize their experiences within historical, political, and cultural frameworks, they are better positioned to demand and implement change. Our Asamblea General, annual membership assembly, brings together members from across all three program areas to discuss, debate, and collectively decide the direction of our organization. Member Power is not only an important political pillar of our work, it is our orientation to politics in practice. 

The same way we believe our power as individuals is amplified when we come together in collective action, our organizations’ power becomes stronger when we can form networks with varying assets, experiences, and perspectives that are committed to striving toward shared goals.

Movement Power

CPC is part of the following coalitions & alliances

  • LA Street Vendor Coalition

    LA Street Vendor Coalition (local)

  • ACT-LA logo

    ACT-LA (local)

  • Right to the City Alliance  logo

    Right to the City Alliance (national)

  • CA Street Vendor Coalition logo

    CA Street Vendor Coalition (state)

  • HFA logo

    Homes for All California (HFA) (state)