How the victims rebuild their lives will now depend largely on California’s beleaguered home insurance market. Unlike many fire victims in other parts of the L.A. area, the Quintons and many of their neighbors had been able to maintain their insurance policies in the leadup to the fire,
Leslie Ramirez and her husband Saul Velasquez are picking up the pieces after the Eaton Fire in Altadena ravaged their family home.
Locations of “greatest concern” in the “life-threatening” and “destructive” windstorm include cities within Los Angeles and Ventura counties.
A damaging Santa Ana wind event was peaking early Wednesday and was expected to stay strong through early afternoon.
There was no official alert about the wildfire barreling toward the mountainous community of Altadena, California ... CEO of San Gabriel Valley Habitat for Humanity, which serves the area hit ...
ANYTHING BUT CLIMATE: Altadena’s fire ... liable for climate change. CALIFORNIA POLICY IS ALWAYS CHANGING: Know your next move. From Sacramento to Silicon Valley, POLITICO California Pro ...
Southern California is again facing extreme fire weather conditions. A fourth 'particularly dangerous situation' warning is possible.
ALTADENA, California — Residents of California’s San Gabriel Valley had been coexisting with wildfire danger for generations before this week’s firestorm. Even relative newcomers ...
ALTADENA, Calif. (KFSN) -- "I just wasn't going to go down without a fight," Altadena resident Robert Garrett said. Robert Garrett says knowing he did all he could to save his home, makes the pain ...
Altadena, California, was among Los Angeles County's first Black middle-class enclaves. Some fear recent wildfires may have erased that legacy.
ALTADENA, Calif. (KABC) -- Despite the burned out cars, the shelves of homes, and the businesses left in ruins, Altadena seems to be making a comeback promise. Those who live here are praying it's true. "It's a great little community, you know, I wouldn't want to live anywhere else," stated Wiley Calkins.
Many Californians thought wildfires couldn’t reach deep into their cities. But the Los Angeles fires showed how older homes became fuel that fed the fires.