Los Angeles County Government Agencies

1 - 20 of 58 agencies

  • Aging and Disabilities Department

    1 contacts

    The Los Angeles County Aging & Disabilities Department (AD) unites aging, disability, and community services previously part of the Chief Executive Office and the now dissolved Department of Workforce Development, Aging, and Community Services. AD houses the LA County Commission on Older Adults and the Commission on Disabilities, along with 14 local community hubs that provide a wide range of in-person services.

  • Agricultural Commissioner/Weights & Measures Department

    13 forms 3 contacts

    Mission is to protect the environment, the agricultural industry, consumers and business operators through effective enforcement of federal and State laws and County ordinances in the areas of health, safety, and consumer concerns of County residents. The Department’s highly diverse public services include: ensuring the safe and wholesome supply of food and water; protecting consumers and businesses from fraud; preventing the misuse of pesticides; managing and excluding pests; minimizing fire hazards from weeds and brush; and providing useful consumer and agricultural information.

  • Alternate Public Defender

    1 contacts

  • Animal Care and Control

    9 contacts

  • Arts and Culture

    1 contacts

  • Auditor-Controller

    4 forms 2 contacts

  • Beaches and Harbors

    4 forms 1 contacts

  • Chief Executive Office

    3 forms 1 contacts

  • Children and Family Services

    1 contacts

  • Child Support Services

    1 forms 7 contacts

  • Consumer and Business Affairs

    9 forms 1 contacts

  • County Counsel

    1 contacts

  • Department of Building and Safety

    597 forms 1 contacts

    Mission is to protect the lives and safety of the residents and visitors of the City of Los Angeles and enhance the quality of life, housing, economic prosperity, and job creation citywide. Utilizing timely, cooperative, and transparent processes, the Department Advises, Guides, and Assists Customers to achieve compliance with the Building, Zoning, Plumbing, Mechanical, Electrical, Disabled Access, Energy, and Green codes and local and State law to Build Safe, Well, and Fast.

  • Department of Community College

    149 forms 3 contacts

    Glendale Community College is a public community college granting certificates and associate degrees. The college serves people from a variety of geographical areas but primarily serves a diverse population of the Greater Los Angeles region that is capable of benefiting from instruction in credit, noncredit, and community education programs.

  • Department of Mental Health

    58 forms 2 contacts

  • Department of Public Health

    226 forms 2 contacts

    The essential functions of the Department are critical to the health and wellbeing of people and communities. CDPH's fundamental responsibilities are comprehensive in scope and include infectious disease control and prevention, food safety, environmental health, laboratory services, patient safety, emergency preparedness, chronic disease prevention and health promotion, family health, health equity and vital records and statistics.

    CDPH's key activities and services include protecting people in California from the threat of preventable infectious diseases like Zika virus, HIV/AIDS, tuberculosis and viral hepatitis, and providing reliable and accurate public health laboratory services and information about health threats.

    Other critical services include providing nutritional support to low-income women, infants and children, and screening newborns and pregnant women for genetic diseases. CDPH also works to ensure the safety of food and bottled water, helps reduce smoking and its impacts and works to prevent chronic diseases and conditions such as diabetes, cardiovascular disease, cancer, asthma and obesity.

    The Department also protects patient safety in hospitals and skilled nursing facilities, maintains birth and death certificates and prepares for, and responds to public health emergencies.

    CDPH works continuously to reduce health and mental health disparities among vulnerable and underserved communities to achieve health equity throughout California.

    Mission is to advance the health and well-being of California's diverse people and communities.

  • Department of Regional Planning

    140 forms 9 contacts

    DRP also provides Hearing Officers to review cases of limited complexity, allowing the RPC to devote more of its time to the consideration of more far-reaching policy issues. The hearing officers are appointed by the Director of Planning from experienced staff members, and are subject to approval by the Board of Supervisors. The Hearing Officers hold regular hearings on discretionary, non-legislative development cases. Their decisions are subject to appeal to the RPC. In addition to these functions, DRP handles inspection, and code enforcement.

    DRP is responsible for both providing immediate responses to enforcement and permitting requests, and considering long-range development issues. Therefore, DRP must consider a broad range of constituents, from individual homeowners, to large land owners, to community groups, to future generations of Los Angeles County residents. DRP outreach efforts to all affected groups have been a hallmark of its operations since its establishment.

  • Department of Youth Development

    1 contacts

    The Department of Youth Development represents a historic moment in Los Angeles County and is the next step in the County’s investment in youth development and advancing a care-first approach to youth justice.The initial responsibilities of the Department of Youth Development include: Expanding and advancing community-based youth diversion services countywide, Supporting youth development services and opportunities countywide, including but not limited to building capacity for youth centers and support for youth development in schools and other youth-serving systems;
    Leading further development of Los Angeles County’s Youth Justice Reimagined model and advancing related efforts to expand youth development and care-first approaches to young people involved in the justice systems to the fullest extent permitted by law; Supporting research and analysis focused on program and policy evaluation as well as assessing opportunities to equitably advance youth development and reduce youth justice system involvement;
    Supporting innovation and collaborative learning focused on effectively and equitably advancing youth development services, opportunities, and supports.

  • Development Authority

    28 forms 1 contacts

  • District Attorney

    5 forms 2 contacts