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California fires

What happened during the first four days of the Eaton, Palisades fires in Southern California

Coverage of the fires ravaging Altadena, Malibu, Pacific Palisades and Pasadena, including stories about the devastation, issues firefighters faced and the weather.

Lot showing burned down homes and cars from a wildfire in a neighborhood against a smoky but blue sky
Homes and cars along West Manor Street were destroyed by the Eaton fire in Altadena.
(Allen J. Schaben/Los Angeles Times)

As of 4:30 p.m. Friday, Jan. 10, this blog is no longer being updated in real-time. For the latest updates on the Eaton, Palisades and other fires ravaging Southern California, here is where to find continuing coverage.

Pinned

Containment grows on Palisades, Eaton fire as Brentwood, Encino residents remain on edge

A man walks through the remains of his burned home.
George Cunningham on Thursday walks through the rubble of the house on West Manor Street in Altadena where he and his family have lived since 2012. Both sides of West Manor Street were destroyed in the Eaton fire. More photos
(Allen J. Schaben / Los Angeles Times)

Despite new evacuation orders overnight in Brentwood and parts of the San Fernando Valley, firefighters made more progress on containing the Eaton and Palisades fires.

As of Saturday morning, the Eaton fire was 15% contained and the Palisades fire was 11% contained. On Friday, the Palisades fire was 8% contained and the Eaton fire was 3% contained.

Rents likely to balloon in wake of L.A. wildfires, experts say

An aerial view of a neighborhood destroyed by fire
A Pacific Palisades neighborhood in the aftermath of the Palisades fire. More photos
(Robert Gauthier / Los Angeles Times)

Wildfires engulfing Los Angeles are likely to exacerbate the region’s housing affordability crisis now and long into the future, housing analysts and advocates said.

Rents will increase, especially near the epicenter of massive fires around the Pacific Palisades and Altadena. Those planning to rebuild their homes will face intense competition for contractors. And impacts on wavering home insurance markets could lead to greater costs for all Angelenos.

As fires grew, so did profiles of ‘scanner’ X accounts reporting what they heard

 A fire fighter works a fire during Eaton fire
A firefighter works during the Eaton fire on Wednesday in Altadena.
(Jason Armond / Los Angeles Times)

Before the fires they mostly tracked police pursuits and crimes in progress — maybe the occasional building fire.

But over the last week, since major fires began ravaging huge swaths of Los Angeles County, “scanners” on X — accounts who listen obsessively to police and fire radio chatter, then transcribe what they hear into digestible posts — have grown exponentially in popularity.

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Newsom invites Trump to California to see L.A. fire damage

Gov. Gavin Newsom wants President-elect Donald Trump to come to California to see fire damage and meet with victims.
(Rich Pedroncelli / Associated Press; Evan Vucci / Associated Press)

Gov. Gavin Newsom sent a letter to President-elect Donald Trump on Friday inviting the incoming leader to California to meet with fire victims, survey the devastation in Los Angeles County and join him in thanking first responders.

The invitation, which the governor’s office said was emailed to Trump’s team, marks a change in tone in the political battle between Newsom and Trump.

Did Mayor Karen Bass really cut the fire department budget? The answer gets tricky

Gov. Gavin Newsom and Los Angeles Mayor Karen Bass tour Pacific Palisades on Wednesday following a massive wildfire.
Gov. Gavin Newsom and Los Angeles Mayor Karen Bass tour the destruction in Pacific Palisades on Wednesday amid a massive wildfire.
(Eric Thayer / Getty Images)

When Mayor Karen Bass unveiled her budget plan for 2024-25, she called for a 2.7% reduction in spending at the Los Angeles Fire Department.

Her proposal, unveiled in April, sought $23 million in cuts to the department, with much of it focused on reduced equipment purchases.

But while her citywide spending proposal was being reviewed, Bass was also in closed-door negotiations over a major boost in pay for the city’s 3,300 firefighters. Those pay hikes — four years of raises and an array of other financial incentives — were not finalized until several months after her budget went into effect.

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Newsom orders investigation into dry fire hydrants that hampered firefighting in L.A.

A house burns along Pacific Coast Highway
Beachfront house burns along Pacific Coast Highway as the Palisades fire sweeps across the coast.
(Wally Skalij/Los Angeles Times)

Gov. Gavin Newsom has ordered an investigation into the causes behind water supply problems that left fire hydrants dry and hampered firefighting efforts during the devastating fires in Southern California.

Newsom’s demand for answers came amid criticism of city officials in Los Angeles over their handling of the disaster and questions about whether local water-related decisions and planning played a role in depriving firefighters of water during the most destructive fires in L.A. history. The governor has also come under criticism, largely on social media and in right-wing media coverage, for the state’s handling of the disaster.

State to probe why Pacific Palisades reservoir was offline, empty when firestorm exploded

The Santa Ynez Reservoir as seen from above in 2022.
The Santa Ynez Reservoir as seen from above in September 2022.
(Hayley Smith/Los Angeles Times)

A large reservoir in Pacific Palisades that is part of the Los Angeles water supply system was out of commission when a ferocious wildfire destroyed thousands of homes and other structures nearby, the Los Angeles Times found.

Officials said that the Santa Ynez Reservoir had been closed since about February for repairs to its cover, leaving a 117-million-gallon water storage complex empty in the heart of the Palisades for nearly a year.

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Insurance commissioner issues moratorium on home policy cancellations in fire zones

Debris from a fire in the foreground and a high school in the background.
Pali High School rests across the street from homes destroyed in the Palisades fire in Pacific Palisades on Wednesday.
(Genaro Molina/Los Angeles Times)

California Insurance Commissioner Ricardo Lara has issued a moratorium that bars insurers from canceling or non-renewing home policies in the Pacific Palisades and the San Gabriel Valley’s Eaton fire zones.

The moratorium, issued Thursday, protects homeowners living within the perimeter of the fire and in adjoining ZIP codes from losing their policies for one year, starting from when Gov. Gavin Newsom declared a state of emergency on Wednesday.

L.A. firestorms bring waves of fire myths, disinformation. Here’s how to debunk it and not get fooled

The Hollywood sign is seen in Los Angeles on Thursday.
The Hollywood sign is seen in Los Angeles on Thursday.
(Damian Dovarganes / Associated Press)

As quickly as the Sunset fire started charring through Runyon Canyon in the Hollywood Hills on Wednesday evening, an AI-generated photo of the Hollywood sign ablaze was rapidly circulating on social media.

It was just one example of misinformation surrounding the Los Angeles-area fires spreading on social media, and experts warn that false information during natural disaster events disrupts recovery efforts and harms community trust.

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Ventura County officials identify ‘person of interest’ in Kenneth fire

The Kenneth fire burns in the Upper Las Virgenes Open Space Preserve
The Kenneth fire burns in the Upper Las Virgenes Open Space Preserve in West Hills on Thursday.
(Brian van der Brug/Los Angeles Times)

A man “attempting to start a fire” Thursday in a West Hills neighborhood that was burning from the Kenneth fire is under investigation in connection with the nearly 1,000-acre blaze, according to law enforcement officials and a document reviewed by The Times.

Juan Sierra, 33, was arrested by officers from the Los Angeles Police Department’s Topanga Division around 5:30 p.m. after he was seen attempting to spark a fire, according to a law enforcement email obtained by The Times.

‘We don’t know half of it.’ L.A. firestorm death toll expected to rise as searchers go door to door

A melted signal light on Sunset Boulevard in Pacific Palisades on Friday. More photos
A melted signal light on Sunset Boulevard in Pacific Palisades on Friday. More photos
(Myung J. Chun / Los Angeles Times)

It is expected to take some time to determine the death toll from this week’s Los Angeles firestorms.

Officials confirmed 10 people died in the Eaton and Palisades fires, but Los Angeles Sheriff Robert Luna said that number is likely to rise.

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Archer fire: Evacuations, road closures

An air tanker drops fire retardant on a brush fire that erupted in Granada Hills, prompting evacuation orders.
An air tanker drops fire retardant on the Archer fire that erupted in Granada Hills, prompting evacuation orders.
(KTLA)

A brush fire broke out Friday in Granada Hills.

The Archer fire had burned about three acres near the 17000 block of Sesnon Boulevard and was growing at a moderate speed, said fire officials. Los Angeles Fire Department spokeswoman Margaret Stewart said the area was hit with erratic winds.

LAFD firefighters are on the scene along water-dropping aircraft. Officials said they were making progress.

It is burning west of the Hurst fire, which erupted in Sylmar earlier this week.

Evacuations

At 11:45 a.m., a mandatory evacuation order was downgraded to an evacuation warning for Balboa Boulevard at the 5 Freeway to Tampa Avenue; Session Boulevard to Sunshine Canyon Road.

Roads

Residents in those areas should leave, officials say. Others should avoid the area.

Archer fire breaks out in Granada Hills

A small brush fire broke out Friday in Granada Hills.

The Archer Fire had burned about three acres near 17278 Sesnon Boulevard and was growing at only a moderate speed, said fire officials, who hoped to control it.

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Disney’s KABC and PBS SoCal stations’ signals from Mt. Wilson restored amid Eaton fire

Communication towers at Mt. Wilson in Los Angeles
Communication towers near Mt. Wilson Observatory in the San Gabriel Mountains.
(Irfan Khan / Los Angeles Times)

Walt Disney Co.’s KABC-TV Channel 7 station, which uses communications towers near Mt. Wilson, lost its over-the-air signal Friday as the Eaton fire continued its rampage through mountainous terrain.

Separately, radio station KLOS-FM 95.5, which also uses transmission facilities in the Angeles National Forest, went off the air overnight. Public broadcaster PBS SoCal lost signals for nearly 24 hours before transmissions were restored Friday morning.

Doctors, nurses press ahead as wildfires strain L.A.’s healthcare

Hospital beds lie abandoned in the street after patients were evacuated from Two Palms Nursing Center during the Eaton fire
Hospital beds lie abandoned in the street after patients were evacuated from Two Palms Nursing Center during the Eaton fire on Wednesday in Altadena.
(Gina Ferazzi / Los Angeles Times)

The rapidly spreading wildfires are not only upending the lives of tens of thousands of Los Angeles County residents and business owners, but also stressing the region’s hospitals, health clinics, first responders and nursing homes.

At least one medical clinic burned down. Senior patients were evacuated by ambulance from nursing facilities as embers swirled around them and their providers. Medical offices have closed, and routine appointments have been canceled. Some providers have lost homes or had to evacuate their neighborhoods, keeping them from work in many cases and making it a challenge for some healthcare centers to maintain sufficient staffing.

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The weather factors that triggered L.A. County’s devastating fires

Neighborhoods destroyed by the Palisades fire.
(Robert Gauthier / Los Angeles Times)

Los Angeles County is experiencing a once-in-a-generation wildfire event, spurred on by a once-in-a-decade windstorm. A true catalog of the destruction is almost impossible to assemble at this date, since any figures are quickly rendered obsolete by the ongoing infernos.

What is possible is to trace the natural factors that conspired to produce such an apocalyptic result, and explain how these factors will likely continue to cause devastation across the country in the coming days.

Faulty evacuation alerts woke Angelenos in a panic. What’s wrong with L.A.’s emergency system?

A screenshot of a county emergency alert sent in error
An alert sent out in error Thursday and Friday told millions of Angelenos of an evacuation warning.
(Brittny Mejia / Los Angeles Times)

County officials announced Friday they are overhauling their emergency alert system after residents across the Los Angeles area continued to receive erroneous emergency alerts that urged them to prepare to evacuate, even though many were not close to any of the fires sweeping across the foothills of the sprawling metropolis.

Residents were awoken in the middle of the night Friday by the now-familiar buzz and chime: “An EVACUATION WARNING has been issued in your area.” Panic ensued as many were left to make a quick decision — was it time to grab their bags and leave?

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In sign of progress, Palisades fire now 6% contained

A man looks through rubble of a house burned in a wildfire
Thomas Landry looks through rubble of his house on Goucher Street in Pacific Palisades.
(Wally Skalij / Los Angeles Times)

The Palisades fire, the most devastating in L.A. history, is now 6% contained.

Firefighters are beginning to make progress on the blaze, which burned about 20,000 acres and a huge swath of Pacific Palisades.

National Guard arrives in L.A., curfews planned to crack down on looting in fire-ravaged areas

A sheriff's deputy standing outside a burned home
A Los Angeles County sheriff’s deputy stands guard in front of a home burned in the Eaton fire in Altadena.
(Gina Ferazzi / Los Angeles Times)

L.A. County Sheriff Robert Luna announced several measures Thursday to ramp up security in areas that have been evacuated because of devastating fires in the area. More than 20 arrests have been made on suspicion of looting over the last few days.

“The Los Angeles County Sheriff’s Department has officially requested the support of the California National Guard for both fires,” Luna said. “They will be assisting us with traffic control and critical infrastructure protection.”

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Firefighters battle to protect NASA’s Jet Propulsion Laboratory, Mt. Wilson

A view of burned down homes and cars along W. Manor Street after the Eaton fire
A view of burned down homes and cars along W. Manor Street after the Eaton fire
(Allen J. Schaben/Los Angeles Times)

Officials said they are making progress in protecting two key institutions from the Eaton fire.

Don Fregulia, an operations section chief for the California Department of Forestry and Fire Protection, which has joined in the Eaton fire response, said that efforts to protect Mt. Wilson had proved successful and he expected that to remain the case.

Los Angeles has never seen this level of destruction: ‘Everything is burned down’

VIDEO | 02:10
Pacific Palisades damage from the air

The unprecedented scale of the destruction in Pacific Palisades came into horrifying focus Thursday from a fire that flattened a large swath of the community, rendering it unrecognizable.

As the smoke began to clear after two days of intense fire, Pacific Palisades appeared more like a moonscape of destruction than an upscale neighborhood known for its ocean views, beautiful vistas and celebrity denizens. Entire swaths of the residential district, from its quaint village to the shores of the Pacific Ocean, were completely gone, the architectural whimsy and lush landscaping reduced to burned-out ruins with white smoke still billowing from the wreckage.

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California lawmakers to consider expediting insurance claims after L.A. fires

A scorched building and car across from a white home
More than 9,000 buildings have been damaged or destroyed in the Palisades and Eaton fires, including those shown here in Altadena.
(Gina Ferazzi / Los Angeles Times)

As lawmakers regrouped Thursday after fiery devastation across Los Angeles, Assembly Speaker Robert Rivas vowed to back legislation to help homeowners expedite insurance claims, while Senate leader Mike McGuire delivered a tearful floor speech addressing California’s “hellish week.”

“Words cannot explain the absolute shock, horror, sorrow surrounding the devastation that we see day in and day out,” McGuire (D-Healdsburg) said. “The residents of L.A. County need to hear us loud and clear. We have your back. But first and foremost, we have to get these damn fires out.”

All evacuation warnings lifted for Kenneth fire

All evacuation warnings have been lifted for the Kenneth fire, which was burning in eastern Ventura County near Calabasas.

The fire broke out Thursday evening and burned about 900 acres.

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Death toll in Los Angeles wildfires rises to 10, officials report

A helicopter drops water on flames.
A helicopter drops water on the Palisades fire along Topanga Canyon Road on Wednesday.
(Genaro Molina / Los Angeles Times)

The confirmed death toll in the Los Angeles wildfires doubled Thursday night — from five fatalities to 10.

The office of the Los Angeles County medical examiner announced it was investigating 10 fire-related deaths as of 9 p.m. Thursday. No information was available on the identity of the deceased or the location of the deaths.

Why hydrants ran dry as firefighters battled California’s deadly fires

A firefighter carries a hose while battling a fire.
L.A. County firefighter Scott Takeguma works to douse the flames on the remnants of a home in Altadena on Wednesday. More photos.
(Robert Gauthier / Los Angeles Times)

As crews have fought the fast-spreading fires across the Los Angeles area, they have repeatedly been hampered by low water pressure and fire hydrants that have gone dry. These problems have exposed what experts say are vulnerabilities in city water supply systems not built for wildfires on this scale.

The water system that supplies neighborhoods simply doesn’t have the capacity to deliver such large volumes of water over several hours, said Martin Adams, former general manager of the Los Angeles Department of Water and Power.

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24-hour forecast shows large volume of smoke moving over L.A. area

An experimental smoke forecast by the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration suggests smoke will move east toward the Los Angeles area by Friday night.

Smoke forecast

0–3 micrograms per cubic meter
3–25
25–63
63-158
158+

Jan. 9, 10 p.m.

Jan. 10, 10 a.m.

Jan. 10, 10 p.m.

These maps show Palisades fire’s rapid spread in first day

Wildfire smoke is visible in a satellite image.
Smoke from the Palisades fire is captured by satellite on Tuesday.
(NASA)

The Palisades fire broke out Tuesday at 10:30 a.m. amid dangerously high winds and dry conditions, leaving dry vegetation primed to burn.

These maps show the blaze’s rapid spread.

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World Central Kitchen providing meals for first responders, families affected by L.A. fires

World Central Kitchen, the global humanitarian aid organization spearheaded by celebrity chef José Andrés, is operating in three locations in Los Angeles to provide meals for first responders and families affected by the Southern California fires.

The local relief team mobilized on Tuesday, partnering with L.A. chefs and restaurants including Susan Feniger and Mary Sue Milliken of Socalo and Border Grill, Roy Choi’s Kogi BBQ and Nate ’n Al’s chef Tony Leitera.

World Central Kitchen is serving free meals at the following locations: the Pasadena Convention Center, the Rose Bowl and St. Francis High School in La Cañada Flintridge.

As of 6:30 p.m. Wednesday, the relief team had served 3,250 meals — 1,850 sandwiches and 1,400 hot meals.

Locations could expand and change, depending on the fires’ projected movements, said Carrie Hayes, a spokesperson for World Central Kitchen.

“Currently our teams are scouting for communities and first responders in need … and delivering the meals,” she said. “As always, we will scale our meal counts according to hour-by-hour assessments on the ground as to the need in particular areas.”

Identifying unknown fire victims could take weeks

Businesses and cars burned by the Eaton fire in Altadena.
Businesses and cars burned by the Eaton fire in Altadena.
(Christina House/Los Angeles Times)

After the firefighters had moved on from neighborhoods reduced to rubble, officials from a different arm of local government arrived in white vans.

Investigators from the Los Angeles County medical examiner sifted through razed homes in Altadena and Malibu on Thursday as they continue to recover the remains of those killed in the Eaton and Palisades fires.

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Man arrested on suspicion of arson in Woodland Hills, police say

Los Angeles police have taken a man into custody on suspicion of arson after a witness reported seeing him attempting to start a fire in the Woodland Hills area, an LAPD spokesperson said.

A caller reported a man attempting to light a fire in the 21700 block of Ybarra Road at 4:22 p.m.

LAPD Senior Lead Officer Charles Dinse told News Nation that the department believes the Kenneth fire was intentionally set. But police told The Times that they could not connect the suspect to the Kenneth fire at this time.

The investigation is ongoing, police said. The suspect was being held at the LAPD Topanga station.

Kenneth fire quickly grows to 960 acres, threatening homes near Calabasas

The Kenneth fire burns in the Upper Las Virgenes Open Space Preserve on Thursday in West Hills.
(Brian van der Brug / Los Angeles Times)

A fire broke out at the border of Los Angeles and Ventura counties on Thursday afternoon and was spreading rapidly, threatening numerous hillside homes in the Calabasas and Hidden Hills areas.

The Kenneth fire ignited adjacent to a trailhead near Victory Boulevard around 2:30 p.m.

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Pacific Palisades damage from the air

Around 5,300 of these structures were destroyed in the Palisades fire, while another 4,000 to 5,000 structures were estimated to be damaged or destroyed in the Eaton fire burning in the Altadena area.

Forecast: Strong, gusty winds will be back as wildfires continue to ravage L.A. County

People ride bikes in Santa Monica near a cloud of wildfire smoke.
Beachgoers in Santa Monica as smoke fills the sky from the nearby fires on Wednesday.
(Christina House / Los Angeles Times)

Wind speeds dipped slightly Thursday morning in Los Angeles County, offering a brief respite for firefighters battling the deadly wildfires that have continued to ravage the region.

But after that lull, winds are expected to pick back up Thursday night, according to Mike Wofford, a meteorologist with the National Weather Service’s office in Oxnard.

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Evacuation orders lifted for Hurst fire

The Hurst fire burns in the hills above Sylmar.
The Hurst fire burns in the hills above Sylmar on Wednesday.
(Myung J. Chun / Los Angeles Times)

All mandatory evacuation orders were lifted for residents near the Hurst fire, according to the Los Angeles Fire Department.

Evacuation warnings remain in place for west of Interstate 5, north of Orcutt Lease Trail Road, south of East Canyon Mountainway, Sunshine Canyon Mountainway west of Ridge Fire road, and areas near Weldon Canyon, Sunshine Canyon Landfill in Sylmar and the Oak Tree Gun Club in Newhall.

An evacuation warning was also lifted for the Barry J. Nidorf Juvenile Hall in Sylmar. That came as a relief to the L.A. County Probation Department, which was preparing to relocate 96 youths from the facility.

Juvenile justice advocates and defense attorneys had been demanding the kids be moved ever since the Hurst fire ignited Tuesday night.

NFL moves Rams playoff game against Minnesota Vikings to Arizona

Smoke from the recent fires obscures the sun at SoFi Stadium in Inglewood on Thursday.
(Myung J. Chun / Los Angeles Times)

The Rams were scheduled to play the Vikings on Monday night at SoFi Stadium, but the NFL announced Thursday that the game is being moved to State Farm Stadium in Glendale, Ariz. The decision was made in consultation with public officials, the participating clubs and the NFLPA.

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Drone crash disabled a firefighting plane. Many irate with ‘shameful’ operator

A large drone in flight
The Federal Aviation Administration is reiterating a warning to drone operators to not fly their drones near the wildfires.
(Federal Aviation Administration )

A drone collided with a firefighting aircraft flying over the Palisades fire on Thursday, causing the plane to be grounded for several days of repairs and leading to an investigation into who flew the drone against flight restrictions, officials said.

“We hit a drone this afternoon — first one,” said L.A. County Fire Chief Anthony Marrone on Thursday. “Our Super Scooper hit a small drone.”

More than 9,000 structures damaged or destroyed, at least 10 killed in L.A. County fires

A house burns along PCH during the Palisades fire.
A house along Pacific Coast Highway in Malibu burns in the Palisades fire on Wednesday. More photos
(Wally Skalij / Los Angeles Times)

Officials said Thursday that at least 10 people were killed and more than 9,000 homes, businesses and other buildings appeared to have been damaged or destroyed in the Palisades and Eaton fires.

Around 5,300 of these structures were destroyed in the Palisades fire, while another 4,000 to 5,000 structures were estimated to be damaged or destroyed in the Eaton fire burning in the Altadena area.

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L.A. County looks to implement curfew in areas around Palisades, Eaton fires

Los Angeles County will likely implement a 6 p.m. curfew Thursday in the areas around the Palisades and Eaton fires in an effort to combat looting.

At least 20 people have already been arrested on suspicion of looting during the wildfires raging in Los Angeles, according to officials.

“As we work through the legal process to get that done, the goal is to try and implement it tonight,” L.A. County Sheriff Robert Luna said.

Read the full story here.

Power could be out for days for hundreds of thousands, even far from L.A. wildfires

A business and vehicle engulfed in flames
A business and vehicle on Lake Avenue in Altadena are consumed by flames from the wind-driven Eaton fire.
(Gina Ferazzi / Los Angeles Times)

This week’s devastating Southern California wildfires and the winds fueling them have caused widespread and prolonged power outages and planned shutoffs that are upending the lives of hundreds of thousands of people across the region.

As the outages drag on, they are sparking anger and frustration from customers, including those who are many miles from the active fires or evacuation zones in Los Angeles County and have struggled to understand why their power was cut, and why it has not been restored.

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Ocean water advisory issued in L.A. County due to potential fire contamination

Beachfront homes destroyed in the Palisades fire.
Beachfront homes destroyed in the Palisades fire on Thursday in Malibu.
(Brian van der Brug / Los Angeles Times)

Health officials are advising residents to avoid contact with ocean water across a swath of coastal Los Angeles County due to potential debris and runoff contamination from firefighting efforts in the area.

The advisory, issed Thursday afternoon, covers ocean and bay waters from Surfrider Beach in Malibu to Dockweiler State Beach at World Way — “especially near discharging storm drains, creeks, rivers and fire-damaged oceanfront properties,” according to the L.A. County Department of Public Health.

Health officials said the advisory was motivated by “the unknown quantity of firefighting runoff, including potentially toxic chemicals and debris, that have entered the ocean as a result of firefighting efforts.”

The department said the advisory would remain in effect until three days after the end of firefighting efforts in the area.

‘This is our house’: Mom and son fought off Palisades fire with pump, hose and pool water

Andrew Grinsfelder, 18, waters down the roof of his parents' home in Pacific Palisades.
Andrew Grinsfelder, 18, waters down the roof of his parents’ home in Pacific Palisades as the sky is illuminated from the orange glow of the Palisades fire.
(Genaro Molina / Los Angeles Times)

Vicky Collison and Andrew Grinsfelder hurried past a burning home on an upscale residential street just off Sunset Boulevard in Pacific Palisades. There were piles of rubble on all sides and glowing embers swirled in the air.

The mother and son had just checked on a friend’s house threatened by the massive Palisades fire, and they were headed off to stop by another home. It was a grim duty. Metal railings or a charred brick chimney were all that remained to distinguish the ashen piles.

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Tying L.A. fires to climate change, Biden pledges full federal aid: ‘We’re not going anywhere’

A man in dark suit and tie speaks while flanked by other people at a table, with a painting and flags behind him
President Biden, flanked by Vice President Kamala Harris, left, and Homeland Security Advisor Liz Sherwood-Randall, leads a briefing at the White House regarding the federal response to L.A.-area wildfires on Jan. 9, 2025.
(Ben Curtis / Associated Press)

President Biden pledged Thursday that the federal government will cover 100% of disaster assistance costs to California for the next 180 days and emphatically tied the devastating wildfires to human-caused climate change.

Biden referenced a phrase from the poem “Easter, 1916” by poet William Butler Yeats, who wrote, “All changed, changed utterly: / A terrible beauty is born.”

He was the first to report the Palisades fire. He’s still battling to save his home

A man in a dark cap, white mask and red work gloves takes a white bucket from another person outside a home
Nic Libonati, right, reaches for a bucket of pool water to help a neighbor extinguish a spot fire in their yard in Pacific Palisades. Libonati was the first person to call 911 to report the Palisades fire.
(Brian van der Brug / Los Angeles Times)

Nic Libonati was drinking Turkish tea with his sister on Tuesday morning as he started his day in Pacific Palisades.

She leaned over to pour the 21-year-old boot salesman more tea in their home office when she glanced out the window.

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Fire breaks out on Big Tujunga Canyon Road in the Angeles National Forest

A one to two acre fire broke out on Big Tujunga Canyon Road in the Angeles National Forest Thursday afternoon, the forest service reported.

It appeared to be tied to an overturned vehicle, but immediately details weren’t available, though officials said it was “burning uphill, moderate rate of spread.”

U.S. Forest Service officials said the fire danger level in the Angeles National Forest had increased to a critical level Wednesday, which pushed authorities to temporarily close the forest. It remained closed Thursday through at least next week.

‘It’s overwhelming.’ Loyola High students moved by donations after their homes burned

VIDEO | 01:42
Loyola High students and alumni set up donation center for their community

One by one, cars, SUVs and trucks were pulling up nonstop to the entrance of Loyola High on Thursday, dropping off food, clothing, toiletries, games — anything and everything necessary for a family that lost everything to the fires devastating Los Angeles.

“This is magical. This is the fabric of what we are,” said Loyola principal Jamal Adams, whose grandmother lost her home in Altadena.

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Fight to protect Mt. Wilson Observatory from Eaton fire successful, officials say

The Eaton fire made a run up toward Mt. Wilson on Thursday afternoon, threatening the esteemed observatory and its antenna, which provides key broadcasting services for local TV and radio stations.

But officials said they were able to protect the site.

“We’re actively engaged there and, so far, no loss to any values at risk at Mt. Wilson,” said Don Fregulia, an operations section chief for the California Department of Forestry and Fire Protection, which has joined in the Eaton fire response. “We’re feeling good about what we have to do up there tonight to keep that site secure.”

Fregulia said he expects crews to be able to keep the upper hand against the fire around Mt. Wilson, though other areas remain a challenge.

Early Thursday, Los Angeles County Fire Department Chief Anthony Marrone said much of the Eaton fire had been “significantly stopped,” but that was before it surged up to Mt. Wilson.

The charge ended up expanding the footprint of the fire by about 3,000 acres. Still, Marrone said winds had been much more manageable than earlier this week, allowing more air units to fly.

“We’re hoping that the weather is going to continue to cooperate so we can get some perimeter line in on the fire,” he said.

The fire had also spread close to NASA’s Jet Propulsion Laboratory in La Cañada Flintridge, Fregulia said. That’s a priority and crews were “making good progress there as well.”

However, the battle against the fire becomes more challenging in higher elevations given the stronger winds, he said.

“We get the aircraft up and we get them flying, and then it’s just too dangerous for the pilots and they have to come back down,” he said. “So it’s a constant evaluation. … We’re being successful when we’re able to fly them.”

Mt. Wilson Observatory evacuated all but a skeleton crew of staff on Wednesday as the Eaton fire approached, according to the institution’s Facebook page. On Thursday, it was included in an expansion of mandatory evacuation orders.

“We are relieved to report that the flare-up of the Eaton fire near the Observatory seems to be under control at the moment,” the observatory posted on Facebook. “There are fires below the towers and parking lot, but fire crews are monitoring the situation, letting the fire consume the fuel. There are 14 or so trucks, 80 or so firefighters, from around the state. We are eternally grateful to the firefighters and our mountain staff for their dedication to keeping the mountain safe.“

The observatory, whose buildings date from the early 20th century, has survived multiple wildfire scares. The 2020 Bobcat fire came within 500 feet of the observatory, and left a large burn scar that fortuitously now stands between the institution’s buildings and the approaching Eaton fire, Tim Thompson, a volunteer with the Mt. Wilson Institute, which manages the site, said in a Facebook post.

Before the proliferation of light pollution in greater Los Angeles, Mt. Wilson was for decades the best place on Earth to study the stars.

In addition to frequent concerts, talks and tours, the observatory is still used for scientific research. Georgia State University’s Center for High Angular Resolution Astronomy Array runs a sextet of optical interferometric telescopes known as the CHARA Array at the site, the largest telescopes of their kind in the world.

Lakers home game against Hornets postponed due to L.A. County wildfires

Laker LeBron James and his teammates prepare for a game against the Hawks at Crypto.com Friday.
LeBron James and his Laker teammates will get an extended break after their game Thursday against the Charlotte Hornets was postponed because of ongoing wildfires in Los Angeles County.
(Wally Skalij / Los Angeles Times)

The Lakers’ game against the Charlotte Hornets scheduled for Thursday has been postponed because of the continuing wildfire crisis in Los Angeles County, the league and team announced.

The game, which was slated to tip off at 7:30 p.m. at Crypto.com Arena, will be rescheduled at a later date. Tickets for Thursday’s game will be honored on the makeup date.

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Massive destruction in Malibu

Los Angeles Times reporter James Rainey reporterd from Carbon Beach in Malibu, witnessing the massive destruction from the recent fires.

Did you lose your home in the fires? We’d like to talk about what it meant to you

Altadena, CA - January 08: Fire fighters work a fire d
Firefighters working in neighborhoods at the Eaton fire
(Jason Armond/Los Angeles Times)

We’re speaking with Angelenos about the immense losses caused by the Palisades and Eaton fires. If you’re open to talking to a Times reporter about your home, and what home means to you, please fill out the form below and we’ll get in touch.

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Disruption, displacement, uncertainty and bad air lead officials to close L.A. schools

Charred barren walls of fire-ravaged Palisades Elementary Charter School.
The fire-ravaged Palisades Elementary Charter School in Pacific Palisades on Wednesday.
(Genaro Molina / Los Angeles Times)

Victoria Ramirez has four children in school and a job to report to, so she understands the inconvenience of closing schools for any reason.

Yet she supported the decision to close campuses Thursday and Friday in the Los Angeles Unified School District as the region deals with an ongoing fire emergency.

Inside the dash to save the Getty Villa from the Palisades fire: A timeline

A long reflecting pool at the Getty Villa, a re-creation of an ancient landmark in what is now Italy.
The Getty Villa in Pacific Palisades, a re-creation of an ancient Roman country estate, is home to thousands of priceless antiquities.
(Julia Carmel / Los Angeles Times)

The Getty Villa, the museum built by oil tycoon J. Paul Getty and home to thousands of priceless antiquities, activated its emergency operations center in response to the fast-moving Palisades fire at 10:40 a.m. Tuesday. At 11:44 a.m., fire could be seen over the ridge, less than one mile away. By 12:27, flames had reached the property.

Fast-moving, wildly unpredictable and catastrophic in the damage it caused along a vast swath of prime coastline, the Palisades fire ultimately spared the Villa and its more than 44,000 objects, including many Roman, Greek and Etruscan relics dating from 6500 BC to AD 400.

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