Our community is facing a moment of reckoning after the Franklin and Palisades fires. Throughout Malibu, metal chairs sit ...
After the fires, job losses and deportation threats, L.A.’s migrant workers are under immense stress
In L.A., some domestic and service workers are dealing with the loss of their jobs due to the Palisades and Eaton fires while ...
From concerns about evacuating in an electric vehicle, to the challenges of cleaning up lithium-ion batteries, we spoke with experts about how society grapples with worsening disasters largely fueled ...
When Jesse Kahn imagined what it would be like to be a father, he thought about music. He imagined introducing his future ...
A new report from UCLA Anderson Forecast suggests the two largest wildfires that tore through LA County may have caused more ...
With city and state officials moving to ensure speedy approvals for projects to rebuild areas devastated by the wildfires in Los Angeles, California’s lawmakers are being urged to expedite rules for ...
Cal Fire firefighters currently operate on season employment, working nine months out of the year before they're laid off ...
After the wind-driven wildfires broke out in Southern California on Jan. 7 ... which killed 85 people in Paradise; the ...
Urban fires pose particular threats to marine ecosystems. Debris and toxins released from the fires can damage kelp forests and lead to destructive algal blooms that snuff out ocean life. Now that Los ...
At least 29 people were killed in the two fires that scorched thousands of acres and destroyed or damaged more than 18,000 structures.
The city faces a choice: remake itself into something largely familiar or take a bolder path and emerge as a new metropolis.
A writer who grew up in the devastated community tried — and failed — to save his family home. But he didn’t lose just a house. He lost his childhood.
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