On Tuesday, the council drafted and posted a flurry of proposals for same-day voting — so many that they were buried under one another on a City Hall bulletin board.
Fanned by strong winds, the wildfires have killed at least 24 people and swept through 40,000 acres in the Greater Los Angeles area.
California law enforcement officials announced Thursday they have opened multiple predatory pricing investigations into fraud, assorted price-gouging scams and unsolicited low-ball offers on property during the current state of emergency in Los Angeles County.
Coverage of the Eaton and Palisades fires, including stories about the unprecedented losses, issues firefighters faced and the winds.
In response, advocates like the Los Angeles Tenants Union—an organization that says it’s “fighting for the human right to housing for all” by demanding “safe, affordable housing and universal rent control”—have begun to track allegations of rental price gouging and have renewed calls for an emergency eviction moratorium and a rent freeze.
In May 2024, the city of Los Angeles adopted a Fiscal Year 2024 - 2025 budget that cut the appropriations for the fire department by $17.6 million from the previous year. At the time, the city of Los Angeles was negotiating the union contract with the firefighters' union, the United Firefighters of Los Angeles City.
The fires have blazed across tens of thousands of acres, swallowing homes, devouring communities and scarring Los Angeles for 10 unending days. They left an ashy trail of destruction, toxins and charred debris that will take months to clear.
As wildfires continue to devastate the Los Angeles area, investigators are working to find out how they started and what may have worsened the situation.
But when those fires leaped into residential neighborhoods this week, killing at least 11 people and destroying thousands of homes, the city ... in Los Angeles County was trying to address fire risks. Less than a month ago, the town council chair wrote ...
The wildfire devastation in Los Angeles will require California to develop far greater resiliency to climate-worsened disasters to sustain its revival—and a path for withstanding future disasters.
Here is as list of organizations accepting donations and offering to help Southern California wildfire victims.
Three wildfires in parts of Los Angeles County are causing tens of thousands of evacuations in the area. "This is one of the mightiest sets of fires that we've seen in southern California," Marqueece Harris-Dawson,