SACRAMENTO, Calif. (AP) — California Gov. Gavin Newsom has asked Congress to approve nearly $40 billion in aid to help the ...
In pricey Los Angeles, where single-family homes under $1 million are lately hard to come by, even destructive fires haven’t ...
The Benn family fled the South in the 1950s, laying down roots in Altadena. Now, they face an uncertain future.
A Los Angeles County plan to build badly needed housing in Altadena — and prevent future fires — may soon go up in smoke.
The fires that burned parts of Southern California will likely become the most expensive wildfires in U.S. history. They also burned a scar through historically Black neighborhoods in Altadena.
Earlier this year, government officials in Altadena, California, finished a long and difficult planning effort to address housing shortages and wildfire risks in the community.
The Williams family, grounded from the beginning in Altadena’s historic Black neighborhood called Jane’s Village, lost four of their family homes to the Eaton Fire.
As California struggles to defend itself against increasingly destructive urban wildfires, recent fire deaths in Altadena highlight what researchers say is a growing trend in victim demographics.
Students of an Altadena school that was burned to the ground during the Eaton Fire are getting a sense of normalcy back as ...