In response to concerns that price-gouging laws were restricting the availability of housing, Gov. Gavin Newsom waived limits ...
Los Angeles' wildfires have left thousands struggling to rebuild their lives amid government failures. With homes and ...
Video by Loren Elliott For The New York Times Supported by By Michael Kimmelman The fires in Los Angeles ... remembers the Bel Air Fire in 1961? It destroyed hundreds of homes, including those ...
A total of about 40,500 acres of Los Angeles burned. The Eaton Fire, where 17 deaths occurred, wiped out working-class and ...
Visiting, dining out, and spending money are the best ways to show your love for LA and help the City of Angels fly again.
Perhaps the fires that devastated Los Angeles in early January will take such platitudes out of circulation, at least for a ...
They ignored issues that affect not only California, but Texas, Idaho, Arizona and the Pacific Northwest, where homes are ...
Tuesday, 5:30 p.m. PST Los Angeles County public health officials issue closures of several miles of beach near the Palisades ...
People living in Los Angeles have always had to live alongside ... His grandfather had lost his home in the 1961 Bel Air fire, and the watch linked him with Kevin. “I suddenly felt like this ...
LOS ANGELES--At least five people were killed and thousands of structures were burned as fierce wildfires raged in the Los Angeles area, officials said. Fast-moving flames blazed through homes ...