After thousands of homes were destroyed, many are looking for ways to make Los Angeles safer from wildfires. But clearing dense shrubs on the hillsides could actually make the fire danger worse.
The latest response of California’s top regulatory commission to a disaster caused by an electric company can lead to only one logical question: How badly must the state’s regional monopoly ...
FEMA and the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers will begin removing fire debris from private properties damaged or destroyed by recent wildfires, officials say.
As the EPA continues to remove toxic materials from the Palisades and Eaton fire areas, the Army Corps is starting its work ...
The Federal Emergency Management Agency and the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers will begin removing fire debris starting Tuesday ...
Over 600 attendees confront officials with urgent pleas for swift rebuilding, improved disaster preparedness, and sustainable ...
Los Angeles County keeps building in hillsides and canyons even as the fire risk worsens. For a century, the lure of ...
Here are the landfills that could take toxic waste from the L.A. wildfires in the coming weeks — many have not accepted ...
At least eight people have been arrested so far in connection with setting recent fires in Los Angeles, according to CNN.
Gavin Newsom, calling him Gavin “Newscum ... particularly the most destructive natural disasters. After the Woolsey Fire in 2008 that ravaged the beachfront community of Malibu, destroyed ...
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