Los Angeles Fire Chief Kristin Crowley asked for full-time employees to augment a mostly volunteer brush-clearing crew two years ago.
Dozens of people are believed to have died in the Palisades and Eaton fires, which have burned down whole swaths of ...
The devastating fires in Los Angeles are revealing just how deeply ill-prepared the city was for a disaster of such magnitude. While nobody can ever be fully […] ...
Los Angeles Fire Chief Kristin Crowley defended her decisions. “I can tell you and stand before you, we did everything in our capability to surge where we could,” she told a news conference.
But critical fire weather conditions will continue through Wednesday evening, Los Angeles County Fire ... LA City Fire Chief Kristin Crowley said. Powerful 70 mph winds haven’t happened yet ...
Criticisms of diversity programs from the right often ignore the facts of disasters on the ground, writes Josh Marcus ...
The city faces a choice: remake itself into something largely familiar or take a bolder path and emerge as a new metropolis.
Perhaps the fires that devastated Los Angeles in early January will take such platitudes out of circulation, at least for a ...
It’s now been nearly a month since both the Palisades Fire and the Eaton Fire exploded in Los Angeles and its suburbs, killing 29 people, destroying or damaging more than 18,000 structures, ...
Mayor Karen Bass and newly named Chief Recovery Officer Steve Soboroff are expected to meet on Monday near the Palisades Fire ...
When disaster strikes, government emergency alert systems offer a simple promise: Residents will get information about nearby dangers and instructions to help them stay safe.
By Chris Kirkham, Judith Langowski and Peter HendersonLOS ANGELES (Reuters) - Seven years before wildfires tore through ...