News

I figured we'd hear the sound of fire engines coming to put out the blaze. Instead, nothing,' writes an L.A. Times reader.
It took more than six months to confirm what officials hope will be the final death from Los Angeles' January firestorms.
Vehicle locator data obtained by The Times show that most L.A. County fire trucks didn’t shift into west Altadena until long ...
An estimated 60% of residents who lost their homes in the January firestorms won’t be required to rebuild to the highest fire ...
The search for remains in Altadena continues months after the Eaton fire in January. The death toll from that and the ...
Making a historical district around a neighborhood of older, preserved homes is a first for Altadena, and any unincorporated ...
With the new findings, the death toll for the Eaton Fire rose to 19, bringing the total of deaths from the January fires to ...
Part of historic Altadena, once orange groves and now homes with architectural styles, is up for county landmark status.
Rather than rebuild, some homeowners have decided to relocate existing houses to now-empty lots in the Eaton Fire zone.
While Katherine Alcantara was evacuating from her smoke-filled west Altadena home during January's firestorm, she remembered ...
Altadena’s unincorporated Historic Highlands neighborhood was spared by the Eaton Fire and is now one step closer to becoming ...
Southern California Edison has announced it will create a program to compensate victims of January’s devastating Eaton Fire ...