Fueled by powerful winds and dry conditions, a series of ferocious wildfires erupted Tuesday and roared across the Los Angeles area.
Fires burning through the Los Angeles area have killed at least 16 people, displaced thousands of others, and destroyed more than 12,000 structures.
The largest of the blazes, the Palisades Fire, is more than 35 square miles. That’s more than half the land size of Washington, D.C. A second fire, the Eaton Fire, is now more than 22 square miles.
SAN FRANCISCO — When he was a boy making long, tedious trips between his school and his woodsy home in the mountains during ...
The blazes are the result of a combination of suburban sprawl in fire-prone areas, fierce Santa Ana winds, dry conditions ...
Cal Fire reported minimal fire growth on the fire overnight. But officials launch search-and-rescue task force in the area as ...
Welcome to this weekend’s edition of the Surge, a wartime newsletter that would be honored to ration its word supply for the ...
Here's where you can go online to find updated information on plowing and road conditions in the St. Louis region.
Fire officials suspect that more than 7,000 homes, business and other structures in Altadena, Sierra Madre and Pasadena have ...
As climate change warms the planet, wildfires have become so unpredictable and extreme that new words were invented: firenado, gigafire, fire siege — even fire pandemic. California has 78 more annual ...
See maps of where mandatory evacuation orders as well as warnings are in place for wildfires burning in the Los Angeles area.
Prompted by an increase in looting arrests, the LA County Sheriff’s Department plans to enforce a curfew beginning as early ...