EPA and U.S. Army Corps of Engineers are removing hazardous materials from wildfire-affected properties, focusing on safe disposal of toxic debris.
Officials released details about the recovery effort from the initial Los Angeles fires — an effort expected to last up to 18 ...
In a bipartisan vote, the California Legislature approved $2.5 billion in wildfire aid for Los Angeles County during the special session on Thursday at the state Capitol.
Even as Santa Ana winds continued to blast parts of the Southland, helping to fuel a new brush fires in the Castaic area and Sepulveda Basin, local authorities are turning their attention Thursday to ...
On Wednesday, Jan. 22, Los Angeles City and County officials provided an update on current wildfire conditions as well as what to expect ahead of an incoming storm.
The funding will help pay for fire response, debris removal, rebuilding schools and remediating post-fire hazards such as flooding.
Wildfires are still burning in Los Angeles County and with rain in the forecast, those burn scars present a new hazard.
Los Angeles faces dual threats of fire from dry Santa Ana winds followed by toxic runoff and the risk of mudslides with from ...
As wildfires burn the landscape, they prime slopes for debris flows: powerful torrents of rock, mud and water that sweep downhill with deadly momentum.
The funding would help pay for services ranging from shelters for those who have lost their homes and debris removal, among ...
Exhausted firefighters battling deadly infernos for weeks are now grappling with more wildfires torching Southern California.