Government is the seat of the
government of Los Angeles County. The
Government of Los Angeles County is defined and authorized under the
California Constitution,
California law and the Charter of the County of Los Angeles. Much of the
Government of California is in practice the responsibility of local governments such as the Government of Los Angeles County. The county's voters elect a governing five-member
Los Angeles County Board of Supervisors. The small size of the board means each supervisor represents over 2million people. The board operates in a legislative, executive, and
quasi-judicial capacity. As a legislative authority, it can pass ordinances for the unincorporated areas (ordinances that affect the whole county, like posting of restaurant ratings, must be ratified by the individual city). As an executive body, it can tell the county departments what to do, and how to do it. As a quasi-judicial body, the Board is the final venue of appeal in the local planning process, and holds public hearings on various agenda items. As of 2020, the Board of Supervisors oversees a $35.5billion annual budget and over 112,000 employees. The county government is managed on a day-to-day basis by a chief executive officer and is organized into many departments, each of which is enormous in comparison to equivalent county-level (and even many state-level) departments anywhere else in the United States. Some of the larger or better-known departments include: Courthouse • Los Angeles County Department of Consumer and Business Affairs – offers consumers in the county a variety of services including: consumer and real estate counseling, mediation, and small claims counseling investigates consumer complaints, real estate fraud and identity theft issues. The department also provides small business certifications and helps entrepreneurs navigate the process of opening a business. •
Los Angeles County Superior Court - The primary trial court for Los Angeles County, handling civil, criminal, family, and probate cases. • Los Angeles County Department of Children and Family Services – administers foster care •
Los Angeles County Fire Department – provides
firefighting and
emergency medical services for the unincorporated parts and 58 cities of Los Angeles County, as well as for the city of
La Habra in
Orange County. •
Los Angeles County Department of Health Services – operates several county hospitals and a network of primary care clinics. •
Los Angeles County Department of Public Health – administers public health programs including STD programs, smoking cessation, and restaurant inspection. The cities of
Long Beach and
Pasadena have their own autonomous Public Health departments assuming county functions, and county public health orders are not applicable in those cities. • Los Angeles County Department of Public Social Services – administers many federal and state welfare programs •
Los Angeles County Department of Public Works – operates countywide flood control system, constructs and maintains roads in unincorporated areas. •
Los Angeles County District Attorney – prosecutes criminal suspects. •
Los Angeles County Office of the Public Defender – defends indigent people accused of criminal offenses. •
Los Angeles County Probation Department •
Los Angeles County Sheriff's Department – provides law enforcement services for the unincorporated parts of Los Angeles County, as well as 42 cities. The
Los Angeles County Metropolitan Transportation Authority, despite its name, is a County department. Technically it is a state-mandated county transportation commission that also operates a large bus and rail system in the county.
Politics Overview Voter registration In the
United States House of Representatives, Los Angeles County is split between 17 congressional districts. In the
California State Senate, Los Angeles County is split between 13 legislative districts. In the
California State Assembly, Los Angeles County is split between 24 legislative districts. On November 4, 2008, Los Angeles County was almost evenly split over
Proposition 8, which amended the California Constitution to ban same-sex marriages. The county voted for the amendment 50.04% with a margin of 2,385 votes.
Legal system The Los Angeles County Superior Court is the county's court of general jurisdiction, while the
U.S. District Court for the Central District of California may hear cases where federal jurisdiction is present. Both are headquartered in a large cluster of government buildings in the city's Civic Center. Historically, the courthouses were county-owned buildings that were maintained at county expense, which created significant friction since the trial court judges, as officials of the state government, had to lobby the county Board of Supervisors for facility renovations and upgrades. In turn, the state judiciary successfully persuaded the state Legislature to authorize the transfer of all courthouses to the state government in 2008 and 2009 (so that judges would have direct control over their own courthouses). Courthouse security is still provided by the county government under a contract with the state. Unlike the largest city in the United States,
New York City, all of the city of Los Angeles and most of its important suburbs are located within a single county. As a result, both the county superior court and the federal district court are respectively the busiest courts of their type in the nation. Many celebrities have been seen in Los Angeles courts. In 2003, the television show
Extra (based in nearby
Glendale) found itself running so many reports on the legal problems of local celebrities that it spun them off into a separate show,
Celebrity Justice. State cases are appealed to the Court of Appeal for the Second Appellate District, which is also headquartered in the
Civic Center, and then to the
California Supreme Court, which is headquartered in
San Francisco but also hears argument in Los Angeles (again, in the Civic Center). Federal cases are appealed to the
Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit, which hears them at its branch building in
Pasadena. The court of last resort for federal cases is the
U.S. Supreme Court in
Washington, D.C. ==Crime==