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The Los Angeles-area fires are a worst-case scenario caused by powerful winds that struck after months without rain. Fire experts, past reports and risk assessments had all anticipated a wildfire ...
The Los Angeles Fires and the Overblown Role of Public Policy . California, of course, has many bad public policies. You can't swing a dead cat without hitting a bad California policy.
Federal and state environmental agencies are preparing to survey fire-ravaged properties. ... [because the Los Angeles-area fires are] a combination of wildfire as well as urban fire," which poses ...
The Kenneth Fire, which broke out near West Hills in the San Fernando Valley, was completely contained, while the Hurst Fire was 95% contained. About 92,000 customers, more than half in Los Angeles County, were without power across California as of Monday afternoon, according to PowerOutage.us, which tracks outages nationwide.
Structures damaged from the Eaton Fire in Altadena as wildfires cause damage and loss through the Los Angeles County region on Jan. 14, 2025. A destroyed home picture on Jan. 13, 2025, in Malibu ...
Los Angeles is bracing for high winds that could worsen ongoing wildfires. The fires have burned more than 40,500 acres and destroyed 12,300 structures. Authorities reported 24 dead. Evacuation ...
The wildfires that devastated Los Angeles in January have caused a world of destruction. They've also plunged an already troubled housing market into a new crisis. In the wake of the fires ...
From January 7 to 31, 2025, a series of 8 destructive wildfires affected the Los Angeles metropolitan area and San Diego County in California, United States. [5] The fires were exacerbated by drought conditions, low humidity, a buildup of vegetation from the previous winter, and hurricane-force Santa Ana winds, which in some places reached 100 miles per hour (160 km/h; 45 m/s).