And 2020’s fires were far less severe than the horrific ones we’ve recently witnessed in the Los Angeles area ... serious about wildfire prevention. California emits an almost imperceptible ...
By Isabelle Taft and Alyce McFadden President Trump has blamed a lack of water during the Los Angeles fires on California ... de Eaton puso a prueba como nunca a los bomberos nocturnos del condado ...
Los vientos ... de Carreteras de California señaló que un camión de gran tamaño bloqueaba el tráfico en la I-8. Se reportaron vientos significativos en la mayor parte del condado de San ...
La carrera para apagar el incendio de Eaton puso a prueba como nunca a los bomberos nocturnos del condado ... at Pasadena Humane. Conor Dougherty, who covers housing based in Los Angeles, explores ...
Fueled by powerful winds and dry conditions, a series of ferocious wildfires erupted the second week of January and roared across the Los Angeles area.
Maybe the families and companies fleeing this state are trying to tell us something has gone wrong in California.
Before the wildfire that destroyed thousands of homes, Altadena was already debating a tense question: should new housing be built in places that could burn?
Architect Susan Nwankpa Gillespie designed the exterior of the second floor of the ADU with kente cloth in mind. Part of the facade resembles the handwoven textile.
The Los Angeles fires have become the most devastating in American history, causing widespread destruction in the Pacific Palisades and the San Gabriel Valley. The state seized the moment to portray itself as a savior in a time of great need.
Wildfires have destroyed around 90 square miles of area around Pacific Palisades, Pasadena and other communities in the Los Angeles and San Diego areas. Over 16,000 buildings have been destroyed, with hundreds of thousands of people forced to evacuate or placed under evacuation orders.
A CalMatters analysis has found that as of 2020, nearly 14 million Californians lived in the sprawling 7-million-acre zone that makes up the wildland urban interface. And when fires sweep through it,
The Los Angeles County Board of Supervisors is asking the state to suspend some housing laws that speed up new housing, particularly higher-density residential, saying residents in unincorporated Altadena affected by the Eaton fire need to be protected from swift-moving developers proposing higher density housing.