Near the ruins of the Los Angeles fires, a new battle has been emerging over how to dispose of the toxic waste left behind.
State and federal officials stood Tuesday in a Palisades neighborhood recently ravaged by flames, near bulldozers draped with American and California flags and surrounded by workers in hard hats and ...
After thousands of homes were destroyed, many are looking for ways to make Los Angeles safer from wildfires. But clearing ...
Edison generates billions of dollars in revenue every year and has a history of passing along the costs of disasters to ...
Paradise Cove Beach cafe reopened on Monday after being closed for 32 days. The owners want people to know that Malibu is ...
Meanwhile, Southern California water reservoirs have never ... particularly the most destructive natural disasters. After the Woolsey Fire in 2008 that ravaged the beachfront community of Malibu ...
Santa Rosa’s Coffey Park was destroyed by a fire in 2017—but mostly recovered. It could be a model for Altadena and Pacific ...
Here are the landfills that could take toxic waste from the L.A. wildfires in the coming weeks — many have not accepted ...
Southern California Edison's potential liability for the Eaton fire could lead to significant compensation for affected ...
A California utility says its equipment may have sparked a small wildfire in Los Angeles that broke out the same day as two ...
A new report from UCLA Anderson Forecast suggests the two largest wildfires that tore through LA County may have caused more ...
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