The Palisades Fire started Jan. 7 during a Santa Ana windstorm in Pacific Palisades. Nearly three weeks later, evacuation orders are lifted.
At a Palisades fire town hall, leaders talk debris removal and disaster relief. Residents don't have to wait till debris is cleared to apply for permits to rebuild.
When the fires in Los Angeles broke out, fire captain Shane Lawlor was quickly dispatched to the Palisades ... Back at his home in Carlsbad, Calif., Lawlor's son, Cian Lawlor, is a fifth-grader ...
CARLSBAD, Calif. — President Trump is set to conclude the first regular work week of his second term by coming here to survey the devastation of the
The Hughes fire about 50 miles north of Los Angeles further taxed firefighters in the region who have managed to bring two major fires in the metropolitan area largely under control.
Cian Lawlor's father was dispatched to the Palisades Fire just over a week ago and he's been working it ever since. The 11-year-old had some... A California ... at his home in Carlsbad, Calif.,
When the fires in Los Angeles broke out just over one week ago, fire captain Shane Lawlor was quickly dispatched to the Palisades ... Back at his home in Carlsbad, Calif., Lawlor's son, Cian ...
Shane Lawlor was quickly dispatched to the Palisades. He has been at work ever ... Back at his home in Carlsbad, Calif., Lawlor's son, Cian Lawlor, is a fifth grader and budding journalist at ...
The Hughes Fire burned some 10,176 acres but that figure held steady throughout the day as 4,000 firefighters dropped water and retardant from the air and used hand tools and hoses on the ground.
CASTAIC, California (Reuters) -A rapidly growing wildfire broke out some 50 miles (80 km) north of Los Angeles on Wednesday, burning 5,054 acres (20 square km) while two major fires burning in the metropolitan area for more than two weeks were getting under control, fire officials said.
Fuelled by strong winds & dry brush, the Hughes fire, the third this season, grew to two-thirds the size of the Eaton Fire, one of the two monster conflagrations to ravage the LA area.
Dangerous winds and drought will create extreme fire risk across Southern California Tuesday, putting more than 12 million people in the path of conditions that would allow blazes to spread quickly as the region holds out hope for rain.