News

What do we know and what can we expect six months after the devastating Palisades and Eaton fires in LA County.
In January, the deadly Eton Fire destroyed thousands of homes in Altadena, Calif. What challenges do homeowners and other residents in one small neighborhood continue to face?
The Calabasas One-Stop Permitting Center, created in the wake of the Woolsey Fire, stands as a proven model of what's possible when we prioritize people over red tape," Horvath said.
Ali Pearl, a University of Southern California writing professor who lost her home in the Eaton Fire, is determined to remain in Altadena. However, her insurance payouts amounted to $600,000.
Under the rally cry of “Altadena Is Not for Sale,” the people of the multi-racial, middle-class town of Altadena, California, are aiming to take charge of their own recovery and rebuilding ...
The Los Angeles County Board of Supervisors voted 5 to 0 Tuesday to allow Calabasas Landfill to accept potentially toxic wildfire debris outside its typical service area and increase the tonnage ...
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 ...
California Gov. Gavin Newsom (D) is asking Congress to provide nearly $40 billion in disaster funding to help Los Angeles recover and rebuild from the wind-driven fires that swept across Pacific ...
Increasing concerns over Calabasas landfill being used as a waste site for the Palisades fire debris led locals to protest. Alex Rozier reports for the NBC4 News at 5 p.m. on Monday, Feb. 17, 2025.
CALABASAS, Calif. (KABC) -- A group of residents held a protest Saturday, hoping to keep hazardous waste from the Palisades Fire from being dumped into the Calabasas landfill.
Samy Arbid told CNN he found a 525-pound adult, male black bear living under his Altadena, California, home after the Eaton Fire blazed through the city.
Ernest Hooker’s Childhood home in Altadena, California “Walking to school and just seeing people who looked like me, doctors, lawyers, some owned restaurants, some owned barbershops,” he said.