California lawmakers in the State Senate and Assembly unanimously passed legislation that provides more than $2.5 billion to help the Los Angeles area begin the cleanup and recovery process from the ...
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 ...
Exhausted firefighters battling deadly infernos for weeks are now grappling with more wildfires torching Southern California – including one that’s threatening 14,000 structures.
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 ...
Santa Ana winds continued to gust across much of the Southland Thursday, but the were expected to back off as the day wears on, giving way to cooler conditions and even rain that could help efforts to ...
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.
As wildfires burn the landscape, they prime slopes for debris flows: powerful torrents of rock, mud and water that sweep downhill with deadly momentum.
NOAA Fisheries’ scientists will watch for potential effects on fisheries and marine life, including anchovy eggs abundant in waters downwind of the fires. They have collected samples both before and ...