Organizations like the Red Cross are playing a critical role with crews responding from across the country, including Northern California, to provide relief to Los Angeles-are fire victims.
Organizations like the Red Cross are playing a critical role with crews responding from across the country, including Northern California, to provide relief to Los Angeles-are fire victims.
Updating maps of Southern California show where wildfires, including the Palisades and Eaton fires, are burning across Los Angeles.
Fires across the Los Angeles area have killed at least 24 people and destroyed more than 12,000 structures, officials said, scorching more than 60 square miles and displacing tens of thousands of people.
LA leaders are beginning to ponder a monumental task: rebuilding what was lost in the Southern California wildfires.
Firefighters from Northern California and neighboring Arizona have been sent to Southern California as out-of-control fires rage on in Los Angeles County. Fires began Tuesday afternoon as high-speed winds,
Fanned by strong winds, the wildfires have killed at least 24 people and swept through 40,000 acres in the Greater Los Angeles area.
Crews are expected to work long, grueling days and will be used to their maximum capacity until they can control the fire.
More Northern California fire crews have been sent to SoCal to help with the devastation caused by the Palisades Fire and several others burning through the Los Angeles area. On Tuesday, hurricane-force winds at nearly 100 miles per hour fueled several wildfires that devoured residential and commercial areas in Southern California.
Awareness of doom in Los Angeles, and yet a need to push disaster away, has created a kind of collective psychosis.
President-elect Donald Trump and some social media users and pundits blamed Los Angeles’ deadly fires on California Gov. Gavin Newsom, saying the Democrat’s environmental policies enabled the blazes’ danger and wreckage.