What remains from the fires that broke out Jan. 7 is a charred landscape, filled with skeletal trees and blackened debris.
Rebuilding efforts are in full swing for Los Angeles County residents as Tuesday marks five weeks since the California wildfires devastated the region.
Van Bakel added that the concentration of assets that were exposed to the wildfire has impacted loss estimates because most wildfires are in boreal forests, where property is not densely concentrated ...
The Inland Empire and Orange County had received less than a half-inch of rain through mid-January, and that total was ...
Merced City Fire Captain Bryan Akers, right, and his son Mason, left, while deployed to assist with firefighting efforts on ...
10:25 a.m.: Beginning Feb. 10, FEMA Disaster Recovery Centers will operate with new hours. They will be open 7 days a week ...
A month after the L.A. firestorms brought unprecedented levels of destruction, the region is still grappling with basic ...
Current and former firefighters in North County San Diego are raising concerns about the region’s ability to handle a ...
Al Roker talks to climate scientist Alexander Gershunov about the conditions that made the L.A. wildfires so devastating.
The Los Angeles (LA) wildfires began with with the Palisades fire, which erupted the morning of Jan. 7 in Pacific Palisades ...
LOS ANGELES - Southern California is expected to continue to face an increased risk of wildfires for a decent chunk of the ...
Two distinct systems will bring widespread light-to-moderate rain to Southern California: one Tuesday into Wednesday, and another Thursday and Friday.
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