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A healthier Los Angeles starts with wellbeing and mental health.

Los Angeles spends billions reacting to crisis. We can reduce homelessness, improve safety, and strengthen the economy by building systems that keep people well, housed, and connected before crisis hits.

Meet Jeannie

Los Angeles is a city of extraordinary people. But for too long, we have asked emergency systems to do the work of prevention, coordination, and care. The result is a city stuck in crisis response, spending enormous sums without building lasting stability.

I am a physician scientist with an MD and PhD, and I have spent my career working at the intersection of health, science, and public impact. My work has always focused on outcomes, accountability, and long term value. I am running for Mayor because I know how to build complex systems that actually work.

Running for mayor is not about ideology. It is about responsibility. Los Angeles needs leadership that is practical, systems oriented, and serious about measurement. I am stepping forward because this city deserves solutions that last.

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The Pillars of a Healthy City

Infrastructure

Wellbeing as Core City Infrastructure

Mental health and addiction recovery are not side programs. They are foundational to a functioning city and a stable workforce.

Prevention

Safer Communities Through Care

When people receive care early, we reduce reliance on emergency rooms and jails, creating a safer environment for everyone.

Stability

Housing Stability Through Health

Keeping people well and connected to systems of care is the most effective way to prevent homelessness and stabilize communities.

Join the campaign to build a healthier Los Angeles.

To qualify for the ballot, we must collect signatures from registered City of Los Angeles voters by March 2. Each page holds 20 signatures. Completing even one page makes a real difference.

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