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── LA-specific May 14, 2026 12 min read

Permitting and Union Labor — AV in LA, demystified.

Every LA event lives inside a stack of permits, locals, and ordinances most producers learn by accident. This guide walks the stack on purpose. IATSE Local 33, 695, and 728. City permits for outdoor projection. The sound ordinance. The special-effects fire marshal. The LADWP power tie-in. The bureaucracy, demystified by the crew that runs it weekly.

Los Angeles event production runs on a different operating system than most US cities. Two operating systems, actually — the IATSE labor framework that staffs every union venue, and the City of LA permit framework that approves every outdoor build, every loud speaker, every flame, every spark, every street closure. Both systems work. Both have their own rhythms, lead times, and points of contact. Producers new to LA usually discover the systems' existence one fine at a time. This guide is the alternative.

Our crew runs the LA permit and labor stack on every major project. The summary below is what we'd hand a new project manager on day one — the actual locals, the actual permits, the actual lead times, the actual rooms you walk into to get the paperwork moving. Not legal advice; working knowledge.

For broader context, see our event production service page, our 500-person conference timeline, and our rigging service page.

IATSE Local 33 — the stagehand local

IATSE Local 33 is the local that staffs theatrical and event venues across Los Angeles County for stagehand work. If you're loading into a major LA theatrical or convention venue, Local 33 stagehands are doing the work. Their jurisdiction includes the LA Convention Center, the Hollywood Bowl, the Wiltern, the Greek Theatre, the Microsoft Theater, the Belasco, the Ace, most touring venues, and most major hotel ballroom conference setups.

What Local 33 covers:

What it doesn't cover, broadly:

For producers: when a venue is contracted under Local 33's jurisdiction, you cannot bring outside non-union stagehands to do the union work. You can bring your own gear, your own lead technicians, and your own creative team, but the load-in/load-out muscle is staffed through the local. The venue arranges the call; the call hours have minimums (typically 4-hour minimum, with overtime past 8 hours).

Practical implication: the labor line on a union-venue bid is meaningfully different than the labor line on a non-union venue bid. The difference is not waste; it's the cost of the credentialed labor force the venue is contracted to use. Hotel ballrooms that aren't directly union-staffed sometimes have card-check agreements that achieve the same outcome.

IATSE Local 695 — production sound and video assist

IATSE Local 695 covers production sound and video assist for film and television production. For corporate events, weddings, and brand activations, Local 695 generally isn't called. For broadcast television, episodic, and feature work shooting in LA, Local 695 is in play.

What Local 695 covers in event-adjacent work:

For producers running events that double as filmed content (a brand activation with a documentary crew, an FYC screening with a Q&A captured for streaming), check whether the production count requires Local 695 staffing. The answer depends on the union signatory status of the production company.

IATSE Local 728 — studio electrical lighting

IATSE Local 728 covers studio electrical lighting work for film and television production. The work overlaps with Local 33 in some venues — generally, Local 728 covers lighting work performed under a film/TV production agreement, and Local 33 covers lighting work performed under a theatrical/event agreement.

The line gets blurry for events that double as filmed content. Two common scenarios:

For producers running cross-discipline shows (event + film, virtual production, broadcast specials), the labor planning is a coordination job between the venue's labor (Local 33), the production company's labor (Local 728 for lighting, Local 695 for sound, Local 600 for camera), and the rigging crew. Most major LA events with film-crew involvement use a labor coordinator who maps the work jurisdictions correctly before crew call.

City of LA permits — outdoor projection, special effects, and crowd

The City of LA permits department handles most outdoor event production permits. The breakdown by permit type:

Permit Issuing Agency Typical Lead Time
Special Event Permit LA Department of Transportation / LA Film & TV Permit Office 15 – 30 business days
Outdoor Sound Amplification LA City Police Permit Section 10 – 20 business days
Special Effects (Cold Spark, CO2, Confetti) LA City Fire Department, Special Operations 10 business days standard
Pyrotechnics LA Fire Department + State Fire Marshal 20 – 30 business days
Outdoor Projection on Building Facade Department of Building & Safety + LA Film & TV 15 – 30 business days
Street Closure / Public Right-of-Way LADOT 20 – 45 business days
Temporary Power Tie-in LADWP + LA Department of Building & Safety 10 – 20 business days
Tent / Temporary Structure Over Certain Size LA Department of Building & Safety 15 – 30 business days

The lead times above are 2026 baselines. Major events (awards shows, premiers, large brand activations) often get expedited handling through dedicated agency liaisons. Rush handling is sometimes available with a fee; sometimes not, depending on department workload.

── Inside baseball

The single most common permit miss we see: producers assume the venue's existing permit covers their effects. It rarely does. The venue's certificate of occupancy covers the building. The producer's event permit covers the show. Different paperwork, different lead times, different agencies. Always confirm in writing what the venue's permits cover and what's still required from the producer.

Sound ordinance — the volume rule that costs more shows than producers admit

LA Municipal Code section 116 covers sound amplification. The headlines:

Daytime hours (7am – 10pm). Amplified sound is generally permitted with a sound permit. Volume limits apply at the property line.

Nighttime hours (10pm – 7am). Amplified sound is more restricted. Outdoor amplified events typically must wrap by 10pm; some venues have later-night extensions, some explicitly do not.

Residential proximity. If your event is within a noise-sensitive zone (typically 500 feet of residential), the volume limits at the property line tighten further. The fire marshal and noise enforcement officers do drive by; we've watched events get cited mid-set.

The producer's most common surprise: the venue's amplified-music permit (which the venue holds) is not the producer's sound amplification permit (which the producer holds for the specific event). Even when the venue has a year-round sound permit, the producer's event may require its own. Verify in writing.

Fire marshal walkthroughs — the inspector you want to know by name

Any LA event with pyrotechnics, cold spark machines, open flame, large CO2 use, or significant rigging over audiences requires a fire marshal walkthrough. The walkthrough happens during load-in (typically the day before the event) and verifies that:

The walkthrough is not adversarial. The fire marshal's role is to confirm the show can run safely. Crews that prepare for the walkthrough (markings in place, safety datasheets on hand, operator certifications ready) get signed off quickly. Crews that don't prepare get sent home to fix things, sometimes hours before doors.

Each LA municipality has its own fire department: LA City FD, LA County FD (West Hollywood, parts of unincorporated LA County), Burbank FD, Beverly Hills FD, Santa Monica FD, Pasadena FD. The procedures differ slightly; the standards are broadly similar. For cold spark specifically, see our cold spark guide.

LADWP power tie-ins — where the electricity actually comes from

For any outdoor LA event drawing meaningful power — outdoor stages, brand activations in public spaces, large festival builds, exterior projection rigs — the power source is typically either a quiet generator or a temporary tie-in to LADWP (the LA Department of Water and Power).

The tie-in process:

  1. Identify a tie-in point. A nearby LADWP-serviceable transformer or pull box. Site walk with LADWP and an electrical contractor.
  2. Submit the tie-in application. Includes the load calculation (kilowatts required), the duration, the connection method, the licensed electrician who will perform the tie-in.
  3. City inspection of the temporary install. Building & Safety verifies the work is to code.
  4. LADWP enables the meter. Power flows.
  5. After the event, the tie-in is removed. Final inspection.

The lead time on LADWP tie-ins is the lead time on big outdoor events. Most major LA outdoor productions start the tie-in conversation 6 to 8 weeks before doors. The alternative — a quiet generator — has its own tradeoffs: fuel cost, sound profile, fume management, and the practical limit of generator size before transport becomes prohibitive. For events under about 150 kilowatts of load, quiet generators are usually the cleaner path. Above that, LADWP tie-ins become economical.

Insurance and indemnification — the paperwork that protects everyone

Every LA event with the production complexity discussed above needs three layers of insurance:

Each policy names the other parties as additional insureds via a certificate of insurance (COI). The COI is the paperwork that ties the policies together; without it, the venue's insurance disclaims coverage if a vendor incident damages the venue, and vice versa. The COI exchange happens at three weeks out in our standard timeline.

Standard COI limits for LA major venues:

The producer's permit and labor checklist — the working version

For producers compiling their own working list, the questions to answer at brief stage:

Our engineering doc on every LA event includes a permits and labor section addressing each of these. The producer doesn't have to track them individually; we do, and we provide status updates as the event approaches.

Scoping an LA event with permits or union labor in play? Send us the venue, the date, the audience size, and the elements that need approval (effects, projection, street closure, power). We map the permit lead times into the timeline at brief stage.

Send us a brief

The neighborhood-specific differences — where the rules vary

LA is not one jurisdiction. Each of the major event neighborhoods has its own quirks:

DTLA. Mostly LA City. Convention Center is union (Local 33). Outdoor permits go through LADOT and LAFD. Power tie-ins through LADWP. The most heavily-permitted neighborhood, but also the most experienced in handling permits efficiently. See our DTLA service page.

Hollywood. LA City. Sound ordinance enforced strictly near residential. Outdoor projection on iconic facades (Hollywood Boulevard, Sunset) carries additional historical-character review. See our Hollywood service page.

Burbank. Separate municipality from LA City. Burbank Fire has its own permit process — faster than LA City for special effects. Many production stages are union-staffed under Local 80 (studio mechanics) for film work; events are typically Local 33 for theatrical. See our Burbank service page.

Beverly Hills. Strictest noise enforcement in greater LA. Most expensive permit fees. Fire marshal walkthroughs are detailed. Most events in BH are at major hotels (Beverly Hilton, Wilshire, Four Seasons) with established permit pathways. See our Beverly Hills service page.

Santa Monica. Independent municipality with its own permit office. Coastal Commission may be involved for beach-area events. Sound restrictions tight near residential. See our Santa Monica service page.

Pasadena. Independent municipality. Civic Auditorium and Convention Center are union venues. Permit office is small and responsive. Lower-volume than LA City. See our Pasadena service page.

Where we go from here

The LA permit and labor framework looks intimidating when you read it all at once. In practice, it's routine. The crews that work LA every week know the rooms, the inspectors, the union dispatchers, and the agency liaisons by name. The producer's job isn't to navigate every system personally — it's to brief a partner who already does.

If you're scoping an LA event, send a short brief. The venue, the date, the audience size, and what elements need permitting attention (effects, projection, outdoor power, street access). Our LA dispatch handles the labor coordination and permit timeline as part of the engineering doc, with lead times mapped against your show date. Doc back inside 24 hours on a business day.

The permits are engineered to the show. The labor is engineered to the venue. The venue is engineered to the brief. That's the order, every time.

── Inspired?

Send us a brief.

Venue, date, audience size, one paragraph on what needs permitting attention. Engineering doc back inside 24 hours on a business day.