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Researchers are studying the long-term effects on air, water, soils and surfaces of properties that didn’t burn.
OPINION- So far, the federal government is in large part failing the victims of the firestorms that swept through the Pacific Palisades and Altadena areas of Los Angeles County last January.
A spike in disasters, like flooding and fires, has meant a corollary increase in housing prices and a rise in homelessness.
NOAA's GOES-18 satellite captured footage of the Palisades and Eaton wildfires in Southern California. Credit: CSU/CIRA & NOAA | edited by Space.com's Steve Spaleta ...
“The wildland-urban interface, or what we call WUI, that’s been here in Kern County for a long time,” said Chief Aaron Duncan. If you look at Frazier Park, you look at Golden Hills, Bear Valley, I ...
Hope Out of Fire,” on display at the Shops in Santa Anita and at the Nixon Library, features 40 compelling images from ...
Nearly six months after wildfires erupted in Southern California, closing the Pacific Coast Highway in Los Angeles and ...
A new report says masks, gloves and other protective gear are not being used by many workers at cleanup sites in Altadena.
Four months after the destructive Palisades and Eaton Fires in Los Angeles, fire victims are now navigating how to recover ...
IndyCar on FOX race analyst and former driver Townsend Bell is taking a lot of vacation, at least that’s what he calls it ...
The federal government and state agencies haven't taken charge of comprehensive soil testing, as they did with past fires in ...