The Hire a Vendor program trains street vendors to become caterers. The program is led by Inclusive Action for the City. (Courtesy Inclusive Action for the City)

By Adolfo Guzman-Lopez for LAist
Originally published on Dec. 23, 2025

The increase of federal immigration sweeps in Southern California this year made one thing clear to street vendors without authorization to be in the U.S. — running a business outside was risky.

In response, L.A. nonprofit Inclusive Action for the City ramped up an existing program that trains street vendors to work in private catering.

“One of the big successes of the year was the growth of our Hire a Vendor program, where our business coaches essentially became brokers for our street vendors and other entrepreneurs so they can get catering jobs,” said Rudy Espinoza, the group’s CEO.

The program was created in 2024 but the group expanded it this year after the increase of immigration sweeps. The group said in its annual report that 34 small businesses were trained for catering this year and more than 350 catering jobs came to those trainees this year.

A person sits at a desk with others around him. The person wears a baseball cap and a red sweatshirt.
Street vendors in a Hire a Vendor session organized by Inclusive Action for the City. (Courtesy Inclusive Action for the City)

“Everywhere from the mayor’s house to a small backyard party,” Espinoza said.

The group’s effort is part of actions taken by individuals and groups across the region to help people targeted for detention keep sources of income.

That help has included buyouts of daily inventory of fruit and flowers, as well as the awarding of grants to street vendors who lost income because they stayed home.

The program is just an example of how some entrepreneurs really dedicated themselves to build out a different line of business.

— Rudy Espinoza, CEO of Inclusive Action for the City

Advocates said the loss of income through detentions — many carried out through violent means — often affected family members who were U.S. citizens and has created a humanitarian crisis as families have lost the means to pay bills and buy food.

People sit at desks looking forward toward a screen. They all have black hair.

The vendor training program sought to alleviate that.

“Sometimes, challenges force us to think, be creative and think about how to adapt,” Espinoza said. “The Hire a Vendor program is just an example of how some entrepreneurs really dedicated themselves to build out a different line of business for themselves.”

How it works

The Hire a Vendor program is free to people who seek and receive micro-loans from Inclusive Action for the City.

Four of the program’s nine sessions are “office hours” in which a business coach works one-on-one with the business owner.

The trainings cover:

  • Catering basics such as delivery, set-up and presentation
  • Invoicing and electronic sale systems
  • Menu design and pricing
  • Marketing through social media

The trained vendors are free to pursue their own catering jobs but also get catering work through a portal created by Inclusive Action for the City.

Espinoza said one full-time employee oversaw the program this year, and he’d like to add another full-time worker to expand the trainings in 2026.

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