Near the ruins of the Los Angeles fires, a new battle has been emerging over how to dispose of the toxic waste left behind.
LOS ANGELES (Tribune News Service) — The U.S. Army Corps of Engineers on Tuesday began clearing debris from burned properties in Los Angeles County.
In a pivotal milestone in Los Angeles County's long road to recovery from the deadly wildfires in early January, the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers on Tuesday began clearing debris from burned ...
Federal and state officials say the temporary sites for processing hazardous waste pose no threat, but residents are worried about their air and water.
The Pacific Palisades community came together to show gratitude to the California National Guard by bringing a Super Bowl party to the soldiers!
What remains from the fires that broke out Jan. 7 is a charred landscape, filled with skeletal trees and blackened debris.
Moisture sweeping down the coast will drench much of California, including areas that burned severely just a month ago.
The morning of Jan. 7, Dr. Reza Ronaghi and his wife, Nasim, left their home in California's Pacific Palisades with the clothes on their backs and work on their minds.
The charred remains of a Los Angeles-area home, now just a spacious lot, have found a buyer willing to pay over $1 million, the property's listing agent reports.
Rebuilding efforts are in full swing for Los Angeles County residents as Tuesday marks five weeks since the California wildfires devastated the region.
When Gov. Gavin Newsom and his political donor cronies at Pacific Gas & Electric Co. cooked up the $13 billion California Wildfire Fund in 2019, they never conceived of wildfire damages on the ...
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