Even as four wildfires continued to burn in Los Angeles County Wednesday, the blazes were already rewriting the record books.
Dozens of people are believed to have died in the Palisades and Eaton fires, which have burned down whole swaths of communities
Years of rebuilding in Southern California will create a scarcity of construction workers and materials throughout the state.
Amid the wildfires, a petition initially created a year ago to address crime in Vallejo has reignited recent support.
Muttville, a senior dog rescue in San Francisco, has been working around the clock to send donations down to shelters impacted by the Los Angeles County wildfires.
A FEMA Disaster Recovery Center for Angelenos impacted by the fires has also been set up at the UCLA Research Park (formerly the Westside Pavilion). The center will serve as FEMA’s central hub for evacuated residents on the Westside, offering aid to those who have lost their homes, businesses or vital records.
Particularly popular in the Bay Area and coastal Los Angeles County, they ranged from $647 per parcel in Lakeside Union School District, a small rural district lying in both Santa Clara and Santa Cruz counties, and $369 per parcel in Woodside Elementary, near Palo Alto, to $59 per parcel in both Sunnyvale School District and Ventura Unified.
The Stockton Fire Department and 10 other fire agencies sent resources to help fight the Palisades Fire in Southern California. Here's what we know.
Three California cities showed the largest increases and decreases in an annual report of the best-performing cities in the nation.
Two wildfires still burning in Los Angeles have torched more urban area than any other fire in the state since at least the mid-1980s, an Associated Press analysis shows.
As thousands of reeling homeowners weigh rebuilding, residents of the tight-knit street on a fire-prone foothill are forced to confront an even more fraught question — not just should they rebuild, but should they do it in an area likely to burn again.
Fueled by powerful winds and dry conditions, a series of ferocious wildfires erupted last week and roared across the Los Angeles area.