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Tag: altadena

  • Eaton and Palisades fire refugees moved near and far — and often

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    With fire pits on the beach, showers and a front-row view of the sun sinking into the Pacific, Mike and Nicole Wirth had no complaint about their $45 overnights at Dockweiler Beach.

    But neither was their three-night stay there last April a quaint camping experience. Dockweiler RV Park was No. 13 of the 15 places they’ve bedded down since the Eaton fire destroyed their Altadena home last year.

    Among their other sleepovers — from one night to four months — were two hotels, an Airbnb, a church parking lot, another campground, a townhome rental and three tiny guest houses — one at a co-worker’s boyfriend’s house. In between were three stays with Nicole’s parents where their precious Australian cattle dog Goose succumbed, they believe, to accumulated trauma.

    Mike and Nicole Wirth in their Sprinter van in Altadena. The Wirths were displaced during the 2025 Eaton fire and have moved 15 times, including stints of camping in their van.

    (Kayla Bartkowski / Los Angeles Times)

    They were not alone. The Eaton and Palisades fires left an urban population of tens of thousands homeless in a single day. They moved in every direction, some near, some far, some — the lucky ones — only once. For many, home became an improvisation.

    Sometimes Nicole stayed with her parents while Mike stayed alone at Dockweiler to be near his work in Hawthorne. It had a subtle reassuring effect.

    “The van felt like the only room from our house that survived,” Mike said.

    The Wirths, who are rebuilding their home and expect to move back in April, reflect the frenetic side of the complicated quest for shelter for tens of thousands whose homes were destroyed in the Eaton and Palisades fires.

    Their orbit, compact but intense, was dictated by their decision to stay near his job and to oversee the reconstruction of their home.

    Others moved less frequently, but often went much farther, to stabilize their lives.

    Christie and Michael McIntire were grasping for anything in the San Gabriel Valley and coming up short.

    “Won’t take cats. Price really high. Extremely far. Somebody got to it first,” Christie McIntire said in a phone interview.

    The McIntire family inside an empty home

    The McIntire family walk through their new home outside Nashville. They are preparing to move in April 1.

    (Diana King / For The Times)

    After spending several months in two seedy rentals, the McIntires pulled the trigger on a longtime fantasy. They found a rental in Nashville. Christie flew with her two girls and the cats, and Michael drove with the dog. They’ve purchased a 3,600-square-foot suburban house to replace their 1,400-square-foot Altadena bungalow. They will move in April 1 when their current lease expires.

    The lease was the first step in a multistage recovery.

    “We didn’t feel homeless anymore,” Christie said. “When we found the house to buy is when we began to feel secure.”

    The Eaton and Palisades fire diaspora has played out in a sunburst pattern of impromptu moves that likely will never be traced in full detail.

    A blurry outline is revealed in a quarterly survey commissioned by the Department of Angels, a nonprofit created by the California Community Foundation and SNAP Inc. It has documented the broad outlines and delved into the emotional and financial stress on those who were displaced. Its latest survey, released for the fire anniversary, found that 7 out of 10 people displaced — 74% from Pacific Palisades and 65% from Altadena — are still in temporary housing, down only slightly from the third quarter.

    Only about a third in both communities said they expect to remain where they are more than a year or two, and about 20% — 22% in Palisades and 17% in Altadena — said they expect to move again within the next few months or weeks, both up from September.

    A sharper picture of mobility can be gleaned from those like the McIntires, who have put down roots and changed their addresses. Data provided to The Times by Melissa, a global address provider, shows that most of those displaced in the two fires stayed close to home but they also spread tendrils across the country.

    (Melissa compiles the data from records including change-of-address filings with the post office, magazine subscriptions and credit card applications. The Times provided addresses of the roughly 21,800 housing units rated by Cal Fire as either destroyed or sustaining major damage. The company tied each address to the individuals living there, whether as family members or owner/renter.)

    More than 83% of the 30,000 tracked by Melissa stayed within Los Angeles County, and just under 95% remained in California. The pattern was similar for both communities: 93% from Pacific Palisades and 96% from Altadena stayed in-state.

    At least 1,600 people traveled to other states to make new homes. Texas (166), Florida (144) and New York (141) were their top destinations. In all, they went to 45 states with Maine and Rhode Island each receiving one. The McIntires were among 50 relocating to Tennessee.

    The preference to stay nearby was strong. More than 2,900 people displaced by the fires relocated within the seven ZIP Codes that had almost all the destroyed and damaged homes, either directly or after an intermediary move. Pasadena was at the top of that list, followed by Altadena and Pacific Palisades.

    Seven Southern California coastal counties accounted for 98% of all displaced people who stayed in California. Los Angeles County was by far the primary destination, receiving more than 25,000 people. Orange County was a distant second at 738. Outside of L.A., Palisadians tended to stay near the coast, from San Diego to Santa Barbara counties. Altadenans more often moved east in the San Gabriel Valley and to Riverside or San Bernardino counties.

    How many of those moves are permanent is not known, but they reflect a cohort of the displaced population more likely to gain stability. About 3,300 were tracked through two post-fire moves, while the number moving three times dropped precipitously to 129.

    While the Wirths’ 15-stop odyssey may represent an extreme, many lacked either the opportunity or desire to lay down new roots while anticipating a return to what they consider their real home.

    Nicole and Mike Wirth with two dogs on leashes

    Nicole and Mike Wirth walk their dogs outside their temporary home in Altadena.

    (Kayla Bartkowski / Los Angeles Times)

    “I never did a change of address,” said Sara Marti, whose Palisades rental was destroyed. “Whatever mail I was receiving, who knows where it went.”

    Marti, her husband, Jordan Corral, and their two school-age children stayed two nights in a Marriott after evacuating. Their next move was to an Airbnb in Lancaster.

    “It was a bizarre experience because it was so far from everything we knew,” she said.

    Next they used insurance money to put a down payment on an RV and moved to the River’s End RV Park in Canyon Country. They thought they were settled until a crack in the gray water tank sent their home in for repairs. They moved from motel to hotel to Airbnb until she couldn’t take it anymore, Marti said. They’ve now leased an apartment in Canyon Country. Corral works locally.

    Marti, who works for the community environmental group Resilient Palisades — remotely now — intends to return to be near her parents who are rebuilding their destroyed house.

    “I’d love to return into an apartment, assuming the pricing doesn’t go crazy,” she said.

    Whether to take steps to formalize a temporary address was a decision that some debated.

    Wirth, who organized a support group of AAA Insurance holders after the fire, chose not to and instead has her mail forwarded to her parents’ house.

    “Today, literally, I have to move again,” she said. “What places do I change my address to?”

    But Postal Service forwarding ends after a year.

    “Now it’s going to be a disaster,” she said.

    Landscaper Jose Cervantes, who lost his home as well as 26 of his customers in Altadena, picked up his mail at the post office for a time after the fire.

    After a series of moves to Palmdale and the San Gabriel Valley, his family of five settled in an ADU in Pasadena. But they never changed their address.

    Once he had made the decision to rebuild, Cervantes installed a temporary mailbox on the vacant lot. His daughter Jessica, who handles bills and insurance issues, goes there to pick up the mail.

    Currently spread out over a Monrovia rental and various aunts’ houses, the family is in the process of moving into a nearly completed ADU behind their future house, which is now in the framing stage.

    Jose Cervantes and his daughter Jessica outside a home under construction

    Jose Cervantes and his daughter Jessica outside the home they’re rebuilding in Altadena.

    (Kayla Bartkowski / Los Angeles Times)

    The quarterly surveys by the nonprofit Department of Angels give a limited view of the housing instability that still lingers a year after the fire.

    The surveying firm Embold Research found in June that more than half of displaced households — 61% in Altadena and 65% in Pacific Palisades — had stayed in multiple places. About a third in both cases said they were expecting to move again soon.

    So many moves only compounded the trauma of losing a home to fire.

    In January, Embold reported that 44% of respondents said their mental health was much worse since the fire, up from 36% in June and September, and 39% said it was somewhat worse.

    “Therapy helped,” said Christie McIntire, whose move to Tennessee restored her sense of community but still left emotional work to do.

    “For the longest time I was gravitating between anger and sadness,” she said. “Happening all last year; you just feel this guilt, like you could have done something to get a different outcome.”

    The McIntire family outside a brick home

    The McIntire family found a rental in Nashville and have now set down new roots.

    (Diana King / For The Times)

    Four sessions of prolonged exposure therapy, a technique used by the U.S. Department of Veterans Affairs to treat PTSD, helped her pack the imagery into long-term memory.

    “I no longer constantly think about that day,” she said.

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    Doug Smith

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  • City of L.A. has approved less than half of applications to rebuild after wildfires

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    City of L.A. has approved less than half of applications to rebuild after wildfires – CBS News









































    Watch CBS News



    This week marks one year since wildfires erupted across the Los Angeles region. At least 31 people were killed, and thousands of homes and businesses were destroyed. Most have not been rebuilt. Andres Gutierrez reports.

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  • Eliot Arts Magnet, other displaced PUSD schools, remain without permanent home

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    Even more than one year after her Eliot Arts Magnet classroom was destroyed in the Eaton fire, Mary Herrera nearly daily goes through a mini-emotional rollercoaster.

    She’ll remember a folder filled with letters that her students have written her in her 20 years of teaching. And then she realizes she left that at Eliot.

    “Every day, you still notice new things that you have lost or didn’t know you had left at work,” Herrera said.

    Her place of work for the last three years was consumed by the catastrophic blaze.

    The Eliot Art Magnet School auditorium along Lake Avenue in Altadena on Friday, Jan. 10, 2025. (Photo by David Crane, Los Angeles Daily News/SCNG)

    Since Jan. 7, 2025, Eliot has been housed at McKinley School in Pasadena and will be for the foreseeable future. Eliot and the handful of other campuses relocated due to the fire remain displaced from their home sites.

    As the one-year anniversary of the Eaton fire passed this week, with it came the realization of settling in to temporary campuses for the longer haul.

    Herrera said she and her colleagues have experienced the last year in stages of acceptance. The first four months teachers grappled with the reality that their school and all their stuff was gone. The following few months the realization that this would be her classroom for awhile, but still a hesitance to fully settle in.

    “Honestly, in the last month it has felt like a whole new realization that this is where we’re going to be,” Herrera said. “I’m going to teach here at this school for the next, what, five years at a minimum.”

    Eliot teachers described their students as being crammed into a small number of classrooms and separate from the McKinley campus. Teachers shared the frustration over a lack of support from the Pasadena Unified School District when their new McKinley home is across the street from the PUSD central office.

    Teachers said they’ve relied on community donations and Amazon wish lists to fill in the supply gap left by what some feel is a lack of district support.

    “I don’t know how they can treat people who have had everything taken from them like that,” Herrera said.

    Eliot teachers and staff have been waiting months to use portable rooms being installed at McKinley. The promises of when they would be usable started in the months following the fire and continue today and they are not ready.

    McKinley officials could not be reached for comment.

    Bungalows are being built for Eliot Arts Magnet at McKinley School in Pasadena where they have temporarily relocated to after their school was damaged in the Eaton fire. (Photo by Sarah Reingewirtz, Los Angeles Daily News/SCNG)
    Bungalows are being built for Eliot Arts Magnet at McKinley School in Pasadena where they have temporarily relocated to after their school was damaged in the Eaton fire. (Photo by Sarah Reingewirtz, Los Angeles Daily News/SCNG)

    PUSD officials did not respond with an estimated time when teachers could move in. They did confirm that all schools that were displaced by the fire have not returned to their original campuses.

    The district suffered damage or complete loss to five of its nine elementary and middle schools, all in Altadena. Eliot moved to McKinley, Aveson School of Leaders moved from its Noyes Elementary School campus to the Cleveland campus, Odyssey Charter South moved from the Edison Campus to the Arts Center and Rosebud Academy moved from Loma Alta Elementary School to Don Benito.

    Mandi Holmes, a parent at Aveson, said students continue to be using combined classrooms at their relocated site.

    “We have no idea what is happening with our campus or any plans PUSD has for us, if any,” Holmes said in an email.

    Eliot Arts Magnet middle school at 2184 Lake Ave, Altadena has debris removed on Thursday, Aug. 14, 2025. (Photo by Dean Musgrove, Los Angeles Daily News/SCNG)
    Eliot Arts Magnet middle school at 2184 Lake Ave, Altadena has debris removed on Thursday, Aug. 14, 2025. (Photo by Dean Musgrove, Los Angeles Daily News/SCNG)

    During its debris removal operation, the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers prioritized PUSD campuses and removed more than 174 tons of debris from campuses. Eliot represented one of the final debris removal projects the Corps of Engineers completed in Altadena.

    While those campuses were destroyed in the fire, Altadena Arts Magnet did not suffer fire damage, but its students have been relocated to Allendale due to Altadena Arts’ proximity to the destroyed properties.

    It was a year of upheaval for PUSD students at school and at home. According to the district, nearly 75% of PUSD’s 14,000 students evacuated during the fire and almost half of the district’s employees.

    In addition, more than 980 families and 120 employees lost their homes in the fire.

    District spokesperson Hilda Ramirez Horvath said the Board of Education adopted a resolution to rebuild Eliot and that the other impacted campuses will be part of the Superintendent’s Facilities Advisory Committee, which launches this year.

    According to the district, the committee will provide, “coordinated, transparent and strategic oversight of the district’s long-range facilities planning and bond programs.”

    “The Eaton Fire destroyed or significantly damaged five of our district sites, and it is vital that we align our bond and facilities planning to this new reality,” Superintendent Elizabeth Blanco said in a statement. “This council ensures that every decision we make moving forward is transparent, data-driven, fiscally responsible, and aligned with our mission and community values.”

    Herrera lost her home in the fire along with about a third of her students a handful of her Eliot colleagues

    Despite the relocation and subsequent hurdles of the past year Herrera said Eliot students have continued to push forward and stayed positive throughout.

    “I think we’re building a really special place and it would be so nice if the district let us know that they thought we were special, too,” Herrera said.

    In addition to being a PUSD teacher on and off for about 15 years, Herrera is also a PUSD parent. Her daughter attends Altadena Arts Magnet, whose campus survived the fire but whose students have been relocated to the vacant Allendale campus due to the need for smoke remediation at Altadena Arts.

    Herrera said Altadena Arts students have limited a play area space and lack basic playground equipment like a swing set or monkey bars.

    Loma Alta Park, they rebuilt their whole park and had a grand opening,” Herrera said. “People are there as we speak playing on it right now, and this district could not get a swing set put in?”

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    David Wilson

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  • Eaton Fire victims: Insurance company won’t pay for toxin removals because our home ‘looks pristine’

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    After thousands of homes sustained smoke damage from the Palisades and Eaton fires, some families said sometimes they wish their properties had been destroyed in the fire. They described a frustrating process of trying to get coverage from their insurance companies for smoke damage.

    While the raging flames of the 2025 wildfires never reached their houses – leaving their structures physically intact – the toxic smoke did.

    Tim Szwarc and Claire Thompson, Altadena homeowners, were first relieved to see their home was still standing after the Eaton Fire. But their relief has turned into uncertainty and frustration.

    “It’s challenging because there’s not really a roadmap on how you remediate a home as toxicas ours,” said Thompson.

    The couple said one year after the Eaton Fire, they are still learning just how poisonous and contaminated their home is. 

    “This is the third type of mask that I’ve now owned,” Szwarc said while holding a chemical respirator. “Each time, I learn it’s not enough, and then I upgrade. Hopefully, this is safe enough now.”

    Dawn Bolstad-Johnson, a certified industrial hygienist with four decades of experience, said smoke from the Palisades and Eaton fires carried a different chemical load compared to a wildland fire.

    “It went 24 days, and it was over 5,000 homes in the Palisades that were completely destroyed, and a bunch more that were partially burned, and then 9400 homes lost in the Eaton Fire,” she said. 

    Within the last year, she has tested more than 100 homes impacted by the LA fires, assessing environmental hazards and recommending ways to manage or eliminate health risks. 

    “When you use the term wildfire, to me, I think of Smokey the Bear,” said Bolstad Johnson. “This is a configuration of a neighborhood. This is like a small city burning down to the ground.”

    She explained the toxic load that the fires left behind is unparalleled based on the synthetic content of modern living, including burned lithium batteries, computers, cars, solar panels, plastics and furniture.

    “It’s a very petroleum-based fire, not so much a bio-mass fire,” Bolstad-Johnson said. “And that smoke is carrying a lot more with it than what you would see in a typical biomass fire.”

    She conducted research in the late 1990s on the risk of cancer-causing toxins among firefighters. She said she was among the first to recommend firefighters continue to wear their breathing apparatus after a fire is extinguished.

    “You have to look at the smoke as the bus. That’s the bus that carries all the chemistry, all the particulates, the acid gases, the aldehydes, the volatiles,” she said, explaining the harmful materials that seeped into homes through the attic and crawl spaces, but also through doors, windows and cracks in the homes.

    “Remember, these were hurricane-force winds. That air is pushed hard to come in. It’s coming through the chimney in that way, coming through the dryer vent that exhausts inside,” Bolstad-Johnson added.

    There are currently no state or federal standards when it comes to testing for or remediating toxins caused by smoke. California’s insurance commissioner established a “Smoke Claims and Remediation Task Force” in May 2025 to address that. But there are no environmental scientists or toxicologists on the 13-member panel. 

    In an interview with NBCLA, California insurance Commissioner Ricardo Lara admitted that there are no clear standards but maintained that he’s trying to address the issue.

    “We’re going to draft legislation,” Lara said. “We’re going to make it retroactive to make sure that they’re covered. And hopefully the legislature has the guts to get this done and protect the Eaton and Palisades fire survivors.”

    Industrial hygienists like Bolstad Johnson said there is peer-reviewed, published research to use when testing and remediating, detailed in “The Chemistry of Fires at the Wildland -Urban interface” compiled by the National Academies of Sciences, Engineering and Medicine.

    Szwarc and Thompson said they are experiencing the impact of toxic gasses and particulates firsthand.  Testing of their home revealed lead levels exceeding EPA limits by 800 times, along with cyanide and arsenic.

    The couple said their initial insurance adjuster told them they would need to remove their drywall, plaster and insulation while disposing of all porous materials. But their insurance replaced that adjuster months later. The new adjuster told them it wasn’t necessary to remove the items “based on the photos.”

    “You can’t see toxins in a photo,” Thompson said. “But he told us our house looked pristine. It didn’t need a lot of cleaning. They believe we can just superficially clean off our items and move back,” 

    The couple said they are waiting for the insurance company to send its own industrial hygienist to conduct an assessment. They said no one connected with their insurance has visited their property since January 2025.

    More than a dozen homeowners who are going through a similar experience spoke with NBC4 Investigates off camera because of concerns they could face ramifications from their insurance or landlords. 

    All said they have experienced insurance delays as well as denials for testing and cleaning of toxins in their homes.

    All of them told NBC4 Investigates they have had multiple adjusters assigned to their claims without resolution, something they see as a delay tactic by the insurance companies. 

    A year after the fires, two homeowners told NBCLA that they sometimes think it would have been easier if their homes had burned down.

    “We’re left in this very precarious position of deciding: is this family heirloom worth the risk to keep?” one victim said. “Now it just feels like we’re gambling with our long-term well-being. Our lives are in limbo.”

    Szwarc and Thompson echoed the sentiment, saying they don’t know what their future is going to look like,

    “We want (the insurance company) to follow the science,” Thompson said.

    ”Frankly, I’m concerned that we may not achieve the level of remediation necessary to make this home safe to live in again,” Szwarc said.

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    Carolyn Johnson

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  • Abandoned shops and missing customers: Fire-scarred businesses are still stuck in the aftermath

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    The charred remains of the historic Pacific Palisades Business Block cast a shadow over a once-bustling shopping district along West Sunset Boulevard.

    Empty lots littered with debris and ash line the street where houses and small businesses once stood. A year since the Palisades fire roared through the neighborhood, only a handful of businesses have reopened.

    The Starbucks, Bank of America, and other businesses that used to operate in the century-old Business Block are gone. All that remains of the Spanish Colonial Revival building are some arches surrounding what used to be a busy retail space. The burned-out, rusty remnants of a walk-in vault squat in the center of the structure.

    Nearby, the Shade Store, the Free-est clothing store, Skin Local spa, a Hastens mattress store, Sweet Laurel Bakery and the Hydration Room are among the many stores still shuttered. Local barbershop Gornik & Drucker doesn’t know if it can reopen.

    “We have been going back and forth on what it would take to survive,” co-owner Leslie Gornik said. “If we open, we have to start over from scratch.”

    Hundreds gathered around Business Block on the anniversary of the fire on Wednesday to witness a military-style white-glove ceremony to pay respects to the families who lost loved ones. Photos of those killed from the neighborhood were placed at the Palisades Village Green next door.

    The Palisades fire burned for 24 days, destroying more than 6,800 structures, damaging countless others and forcing most of the neighborhood’s residents to move elsewhere. About 30 miles northeast, the Eaton fire burned more than 9,400 structures. Combined, the fires killed 31 people.

    Remnants of the the Pacific Palisades Business Block, which was completed in 1924 and burned in the Palisades fire.

    The few businesses that are back in Palisades serve as a beacon of hope for the community, but owners and managers say business is down and customers haven’t returned.

    Ruby Nails & Spa, located near the Business Block, was closed for eight months before reopening in September. Now business is only half of what it was before the fires, owner Ruby Hong-Tran said.

    “People come back to support but they live far away now,” she said. “All my clients, their houses burned.”

    Ruby Hong-Tran, owner of Ruby Nails & Spa in Pacific Palisades, says her business is half of what it was since reopening.

    Ruby Hong-Tran, owner of Ruby Nails & Spa in Pacific Palisades, says her business is half of what it was since reopening.

    It took months to clean all the smoke damage from her shop. The front is still being fixed to cover up burn damage.

    The firestorms destroyed swaths of other neighborhoods, including Malibu, Topanga, Sierra Madre and Altadena, where businesses and homeowners also are struggling to build back.

    Some are figuring out whether it is worth rebuilding. Some have given up.

    The Los Angeles Economic Development Corporation estimated last year that more than 1,800 small businesses were in the burn zones in Pacific Palisades, Malibu and Altadena, impacting more than 11,000 jobs.

    Businesses say they often have been on their own. The Federal Emergency Management Agency tasked the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers to clean up debris at private residences, some public buildings and places of worship — but not commercial properties.

    Business owners had to clean up the charred debris and toxic waste on their properties. Many had to navigate complicated insurance claims and apply for emergency loans to stay afloat.

    Rosie Maravilla, general manager of Anawalt’s Palisades Hardware, said damage to her store was limited, and insurance covered the cleaning, so she was able to open quickly. The store reopened just one month after the fire.

    Rosie Maravilla, general manager of Anawalt Palisades Hardware, in front of of the store in Pacific Palisades.

    Rosie Maravilla, general manager of Anawalt Palisades Hardware, in front of of the store in Pacific Palisades.

    Still, sales are 35% lower than what they used to be.

    “In the early days, it was bad. We weren’t making anything,” Maravilla said. “We’re lucky the company kept us employed.”

    The customer base has changed. Instead of homeowners working on personal projects, the store is serving contractors working on rebuilding in the area.

    An archival image of the area in Pacific Palisades hangs over the aisles in Anawalt Palisades Hardware.

    An archival image of the area in Pacific Palisades hangs over the aisles in Anawalt Palisades Hardware, where business is down despite a customer base of contractors who are rebuilding.

    Across the street from the Business Block, the Palisades Village mall was spared the flames and looks pristine, but is still closed. Shop windows are covered with tarps. Low metal gates block entry to the high-end outlets. The mall is still replacing its drywall to eliminate airborne contaminants that the fire could have spread.

    All of its posh shops still are shut: Erewhon, Lululemon, Bay Theater, Blue Ribbon Sushi, athletic apparel store Alo, Buck Mason men’s and Veronica Beard women’s boutiques.

    Mall owner and developer Rick Caruso said he is spending $60 million to reopen in August.

    The need to bring back businesses impacted by the fires is urgent, Caruso said, and not just to support returning residents.

    “It’s critical to bring jobs back and also for the city to start creating some tax revenue to support city services,” he said. ”Leaders need to do more to speed up the rebuilding process, such as speeding up the approval of building permits and stationing building inspectors closer to burn areas.”

    Pedestrians walk past the Erewhon market in Palisades Village that plans to reopen this year.

    Pedestrians walk past the Erewhon market in Palisades Village that plans to reopen this year.

    (Genaro Molina/Los Angeles Times)

    Wednesday, on the anniversary of the fire, Caruso sent three light beams into the sky over the mall, which met in one stream to honor the impacted communities of Pacific Palisades, Altadena and Malibu.

    The nighttime display will continue through Jan. 31.

    Business Block’s history dates to 1924, when it served as a home for the community’s first ventures. In the 1980s, plans to tear it down and build a mall sparked a local uprising to save the historic symbol of the neighborhood’s vibrancy. It was designated a Los Angeles Historic-Cultural Monument in 1984.

    Tiana Noble, a Starbucks spokesperson, said the landlord terminated the company’s lease when the building burned down. Bank of America said it secured a new lease to rebuild nearby.

    Business Block’s fate is still unclear. Some people want to preserve its shell and turn it into a memorial.

    This week, it was ringed by a fence emblazoned with the words “Empowering fresh starts together.”

    Caruso said the ruins should be torn down.

    “It needs to be demolished and cleaned up,” he said. “It’s an eyesore right now and a hazard. I would put grass on it and make it attractive to the community.”

    Twisted and scorched remnants of the the Pacific Palisades Business Block still are there a year after the fire.

    Twisted and scorched remnants of the the Pacific Palisades Business Block still are there a year after the fire.

    A short walk from the Business Block and near a burned-down Ralphs grocery store is the Palisades Garden Cafe, one of the few places in the neighborhood to get food and drink. The small, vibrant cafe was closed for two months after the fire, during which the employees went without pay.

    Manager Lita Rodriguez said business is improving, but misses the regulars.

    “We used to get tons of students and teachers who live and work here,” she said. “Our customers are mostly contractors now.”

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    Caroline Petrow-Cohen, Roger Vincent

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  • Survivors in Palisades and Altadena mark anniversary of deadly fires with anger and mourning

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    One year after two of the most destructive wildfires in California’s history erupted just hours apart, survivors commemorated the day in Altadena and Pacific Palisades with a mixture of anger and somber remembrance.

    At the American Legion veterans post in the Palisades, hundreds gathered at a military-style white-glove ceremony to pay respects to the 12 families who lost loved ones in the Palisades fire.

    Just down the street, an even larger crowd shouted the rally cry “They let us burn,” to demand comprehensive disaster planning, relief for families working to rebuild and accountability for government missteps that they say enabled the disaster and have slowed the recovery.

    In Altadena, survivors congregated at the Eaton Fire Collaborative’s community center with a clear message: They were not backing down in the fight to return home.

    “This year has been the hardest year of our lives,” said Joy Chen, executive director of the Eaton Fire Survivor Network. “Unimaginable grief. The 31 people who died that day, and the hundreds who have died prematurely since. Home lost. Jobs lost. Incomes lost. A sense of safety and identity stripped away.”

    In the evening, Atladenans plan to gather at a beloved family-owned burger joint that miraculously still stands amid a sea of empty lots. The restaurant, Fair Oaks Burger, reopened an outdoor kitchen for residents and recovery workers just weeks after the fire and has become a lifeline for the neighborhood.

    Jessica Rogers, who lost her home in the Palisades fire and has since become the executive director of the Palisades Long-Term Recovery Group, which organized the remembrance ceremony, said that people are still processing what happened over the last year.

    “The five different stages of grief — you can feel them. Sometimes people can feel them almost all at the same time,” she said. “There is no right or wrong way to process grief. Everybody processes it in their own way, at their own speed and their own time. And some need to do it at home, behind closed doors; others need to do it very vocally, out in public.”

    Pacific Palisades residents Julia Citron, right, cries with her mother Lainie with Palisades fire survivors

    Pacific Palisades resident Julia Citron, right, cries with her mother, Lainie, in Palisades Village on Wednesday. The Citrons lost their home in the fire. “It was the only house our children knew,” said Lainie Citron.

    (Genaro Molina / Los Angeles Times)

    Very different communities, the Palisades and Altadena share similar frustrations — with insurance companies, government agencies and disaster scammers. But on Wednesday, they directed their wrath on contrasting targets. In Altadena, activists are focused on real estate speculators and Southern California Edison, suspected of triggering the Eaton fire. In the Palisades, anger continues to mount against Los Angeles Mayor Karen Bass, the city’s Fire Department and state agencies.

    Inside the Palisades Legion Post, the 11-year-old daughter of Jim Cragg, the Post’s former commander, handed white roses to the families of fire victims. One of these was a family member of Rory Sykes, who perished in the blaze, who told Cragg: “He would have loved this.” Both held back tears.

    The families then led hundreds of Palisadians waiting outside — many wearing “They Let Us Burn” T-shirts — in a procession down to a small community park, where the legion had placed 13 memorials: One for each victim, and one for the many uncounted lives lost in the fire’s wake.

    In a moment of silence, Palisadians called out the names of loved ones who had died in the aftermath. Many sobbed.

    Researchers estimate the January fires resulted in upward of 400 excess deaths in L.A. County beyond the official death toll.

    1

    Steve Salinas shields from intense heat as he hoses down a neighbors rooftop

    2

    The view from the same rooftop, one year later.

    1. Steve Salinas shields from intense heat as he hoses down a neighbors rooftop on Sinaloa Ave. as the Eaton Fire continues to grow, January 8, 2025. (Robert Gauthier/Los Angeles Times) 2. The view from the same rooftop, one year later. (Robert Gauthier/Los Angeles Times)

    “People burned alive in their homes. There was nobody going to get them,” Kathleen Boltiansky said through tears as she watched the ceremony.

    Boltiansky, who lost her house in the fire, planned to attend the “They Let Us Burn” rally after the service. “Public safety should be item No. 1 — if they cannot provide public safety, what are they doing?”

    Just across the street, Billy Joel’s “We Didn’t Start the Fire” played over a loudspeaker as protesters gathered in front of the burned husk of the historic 1924 Business Block Building.

    Rally organizer Jeremy Padawer, who lost his home in the Palisades fire, took the stage. “The days of gaslighting should be over,” he called out.

    Padawer asked the audience to raise their hands if their home burned or remains contaminated.

    Hundreds of hands shot up.

    Josh Lederer, clutching a “They Let Us Burn” banner, described how he, his wife and 2-year-old daughter moved five times since the fire and are still unable to return to their home amid fights with their insurance company. He’s glad his child is too young to really understand what’s going on.

    “You feel, when there’s an emergency, your city’s going to be there to protect you, and we had nobody,” said Lederer, 42. “And since then, we’ve had nobody helping us. All we get is lip service from Karen Bass and Newsom that it’s somebody else’s fault or we’re trying to profit off this. We’re not trying to profit off anything. We want our lives back.”

    Los Angeles Police Chief Jim McDonald, left, speaks with Mayor Karen Bass

    Los Angeles Police Chief Jim McDonald, left, speaks with Mayor Karen Bass after a private ceremony where they remembered the fire victims with faith leaders, LAPD officers and city officials as flags were lowered outside City Hall.

    (Allen J. Schaben / Los Angeles Times)

    When ABC 7 Eyewitness News asked Bass if she thought the “They Let Us Burn” rally is how residents should commemorate the one-year anniversary, she dismissed the event.

    “I don’t think so,” she said. “But again, I think there are people who are profiting off this, and that is what I find very despicable.”

    Padawer said he had invited Bass and Gov. Gavin Newsom to the rally to listen to survivors and accept accountability, but neither joined.

    A spokesperson for Newsom’s office said the governor would meet directly with survivors in Los Angeles this week. Bass started the day at a private vigil at the Self-Realization Fellowship Lake Shrine in Pacific Palisades, then presided over a flag-lowering ceremony at City Hall to honor the victims.

    a woman in white gloves hugs another person as people look on

    Jessica Rogers with the Palisades Long Term Recovery Group, third from left, hugs Marina Shterenberg, who lost a loved one in the Palisades fire, during a community ceremony in partnership with the Palisades American Legion Post 283, marking the one year anniversary of the fire on January 7, 2026. The ceremony honored those who lost their lives in the fire, including Mark Shterenberg.

    (Christina House/Los Angeles Times)

    Several elected officials attended the American Legion ceremony — including state Sen. Ben Allen and county Supervisor Lindsey Horvath — but only one attended the rally too: City Councilmember Traci Park. She stepped on stage at the rally in a far less somber tone than at the memorial.

    “Let’s end this culture of half-assed solutions,” she said — also noting that there were “some folks” who “didn’t want me to come here today.”

    “What happened on Jan. 7 was catastrophic failure and to pretend otherwise is just insulting,” she told the crowd. “You did not imagine what happened, and you are right to be angry.”

    In Altadena, a coalition of lawmakers, survivors and advocates at the Collaboratory community center set the tone for the second year of recovery.

    Recently, a survey from the nonprofit Department of Angels found that more than 7 out of 10 Altadena residents remain displaced from their homes. Nearly half have exhausted their savings, and over 40% have taken on personal debt to survive, said Miguel Santana, co-founder of the nonprofit.

    Among them are people like Ada Hernandez, who owned a 1950s home on Mountain View Street with her husband, Miguel, where they lived with their 5-year-old son, Mason, 2-year-old Sadie and 14-year-old dog Bentley. They moved into their home in 2018, on the same day she lost her firstborn son. But in the fire, she said, she lost every physical memory of him, including his neonatal intensive care unit pillow and handprint.

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    Now, the pain has compounded as her family has been forced to move three times over the last year. They have spent the last two months in an Airbnb with help from the Salvation Army, she said, but that runs out next Wednesday.

    “We feel forgotten,” Hernandez, 37, said. “We feel like we’re at a standstill.”

    Bass and Newsom have touted L.A.’s recovery as one of the fastest in modern California history. Bass, in particular, points to her work in cutting red tape at the Department of Building and Safety, which is reviewing and signing off on the rebuilding plans. But to many survivors, recovery still feels painfully slow.

    Avaristo Serrano helps build a home on Highview Street

    Avaristo Serrano helps build a home on Highview Street, one year after the Eaton fire.

    (Robert Gauthier / Los Angeles Times)

    As of December, L.A. County had issued rebuilding permits for about 16% of homes destroyed in Altadena, and the city of L.A. issued permits for just under 14% for the Palisades, The Times found. Many whose homes survived the fire but were contaminated by smoke and ash are still fighting with their insurance companies to remediate their homes. Many homes in Altadena remain contaminated even after remediation.

    Mark Mariscal, a longtime Altadena resident, said he faced months of delays by his insurance company but, with help from the Eaton Fire Survivors Network, finally got a check in the mail. He became emotional as he remembered the lives lost and everything that transpired since Jan. 7.

    “It’s just a battle, a good one because we’re pretty sure we’re never moving again,” he said. “After we build this house the way we want it, we’re not moving again. Unless I’m sent up to my higher power.”

    For many survivors, finding a sense of peace in their healing journeys one year into recovery has proved difficult without closure. Investigations and reports into the failures that led to and exacerbated the disasters have left residents with more questions than answers.

    In October, federal investigators announced the Palisades fire appeared to explode from a small brush fire still smoldering from a week prior. Ongoing litigation has suggested that Los Angeles Fire Department leaders limited their firefighting techniques to protect sensitive plants at the request of California State Parks, and investigations by The Times found that leaders ordered firefighters to leave the site even though it was still smoldering and subsequently covered up their mistakes.

    Meanwhile, emergency officials failed to issue evacuation orders for west Altadena, a historically Black enclave, until five hours after the fire began to engulf homes in the neighborhood. An investigation by The Times found that even as the fire progressed far into the west side of town, the majority of Los Angeles County Fire Department resources remained elsewhere.

    “So many different layers of mistakes had to be made for this to occur,” Padawer told The Times. He said the rally was intended to highlight both the “gaslighting” and “solutions that can help our neighbors come home.”

    a person wearing a white glove stands at attention

    The Palisades Long Term Recovery Group, in partnership with the Palisades American Legion Post 283 hosts a community ceremony with white glove presentation of flags for the families of those lost, marking the one year anniversary of the Palisades fire on January 7, 2026.

    (Christina House/Los Angeles Times)

    Sue Kohl, president of the Pacific Palisades Community Council, said she had mixed feelings early Wednesday as reporters gathered for a news conference on the barren front lawn of what will be her new home on Iliff Street in the decimated Alphabet Streets neighborhood.

    Construction on her two-story home — surrounded by empty lots — is well underway. But she has no memories here, she said. It’s not the place where she lived for 32 years and raised five children and three stepchildren.

    The anniversary, she said, is “like emotional ping pong. You want to be positive. But at the same time — I mean, look around. At least now you see a lot of construction.”

    Many survivors say a hope for the future is the one thing that motivates them. In five years, or maybe ten, Rogers looks forward to all the little things that make the Palisades the Palisades.

    “I’d like to see children running down the streets happily. I’d like to hear them, see them on their bikes, watch the teenagers hang out at CVS, in the parks. I’d like to see all Angelenos from all parts of Los Angeles back up in our hiking trails,” she said.

    “That would bring me a lot of joy, to see our schools thriving again, and I’d love to complain about the 3 p.m. traffic — the kids’ pickup time from schools in the village,” she said. “That’s what I’d like to see come back in our community as soon as possible.”

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  • Pasadena Jewish Temple marks Eaton fire anniversary on ‘hallowed ground’

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    There was none of the strong winds that whipped embers into hungry flames at the place where the Pasadena Jewish Temple and Center once stood. But on Tuesday night, on the eve of Jan. 7, about 400 people gathered under big white tent on North Altadena Drive, the first time the synagogue’s congregants have been together at the site.

    “Tonight is our time to grieve for the loss we endured one year ago,” the temple’s Rabbi Joshua Ratner said. “This space is for all of us to mourn together, pay tribute to those we lost, and acknowledge the depth of our sorrow.”

Ratner, who began his tenure at the temple in July, invited his congregation to rededicate the hallowed ground of their longtime sanctuary in many ways, including collecting colored stones to place at a Tree of Life, collecting testimonials of memories from the old campus, and having congregants grow trees that they can later replant when the synagogue and campus is rebuilt in three to four years.

The communal memorial gathering marks the one-year anniversary of the Eaton fire, which burned thousands of homes and killed at least 19 people.

Los Angeles County Supervisor Kathryn Barger, who received an award at the event, acknowledged the next day’s anniversary will be a difficult one for her, even as she thanked the Jewish community for making her a better leader.

“Tonight, I look at this as a time of hope, of what can be done when we work together,” she said.

Mournful Kaddish were sung to tally the losses: the synagogue and campus, including the B’nai Simcha Community Preschool, which served 400 families, and the original building, which was constructed in 1941. About 15 member families lost their homes in the blaze, and many remain displaced.

“Many people haven’t even been able to handle driving by before tonight,” Melissa Levy, executive director of the temple, said of the temple’s 430 member units, which include individuals or families. The sacred space they knew looks different now, she added, but they can look at it as a clean slate.

Without its buildings, congregants celebrated Shabbat at donated spaces, such as Mayfield Senior School in Pasadena, before renting offices at First United Methodist Church in Pasadena. The preschool has found new quarters at Frostig School down the street from their original site. Jewish holidays were celebrated in members’ homes or rented locations such as Caltech in Pasadena.

Cantor Ruth Berman Harris, her husband and a team of temple members saved the temple’s 13 Torah scrolls the night the blaze exploded. The Torah scrolls are now safely in the keeping of the Huntington Library in San Marino.

According to the Jewish Federation Los Angeles, between 45,000 and 59,000 Jewish households were affected bv the fires, or a total of about 147,000 people. The federation raised just over $9 million for its Wildfire Crisis Relief Fund, with about 70% of that total coming from out of state donors.

Theresa Brekan of Pasadena, is the operations manager for the temple. Her job now includes juggling two sites and any rentals they need for events and programs. Returning to the cleared lot of the temple for the first time since the fires, Brekan said she got chills.

“There were so many memories in this place, and I can still feel the love,” she said.

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  • Worshippers hold memorial ceremony for Jewish temple destroyed in Eaton Fire

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    More than 400 people came together on Tuesday for a somber commemoration nearly a year after their place of worship was consumed by the Eaton Fire.

    Families from the Pasadena Jewish Temple & Center gathered for a remembrance of the place where they once worshipped. The temple, which was previously on Altadena Drive in Pasadena, was destroyed by the Eaton Fire last January.

    The congregation returned to Pasadena for a memorial ceremony on the very ground where their synagogue once stood.

    “It’s a lot to lose, and at the same time, we’ve really grown in terms of the amount of solidarity we’ve shown one another,” said Rabbi Josh Ratner. “The way we’ve cared for one another, the way we’ve held one another, it has made our community stronger.”

    The emotional remembrance was filled with music, prayer and hope. Remarks were made by clergy and local leaders who acknowledged the pain of loss, as well as the strength their traumas revealed.

    “The spirit is still so vibrant,” said Andrea Mark, who lost her home to the Altadena fire. “… The community is still very much together.”

    Despite efforts from firefighters to save it, the Pasadena Jewish Temple & Center was destroyed by the Eaton Fire in Altadena. Tracey Leong reports for the NBC4 News at 1 a.m. on Wednesday, Jan. 8, 2025.

    The Pasadena Jewish Temple & Center has served the community for more than 100 years. Although the building, which was constructed in 1941, was destroyed, members say their faith is stronger than ever.

    “I was given this blessing of all these kind people and kind strangers, so now it’s up to me to pay it forward, so I can be kind to others and hope they will pay it forward, too,” Mark said.

    According to Ratner, the temple is already under the process of planning its new center. It’s expected to be completed in the next several years.

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    Tracey Leong and Karla Rendon

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  • Then-and-now images show the Palisades and Altadena 1 year after wildfires

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    Two of the most destructive wildfires on record in California forever changed landscapes and lives when they burned into neighborhoods in the Palisades and Altadena one year ago in a ferocious windstorm.

    As the flames from the Eaton and Palisades fires were contained weeks after they ignited Jan. 7, 2025 and large-scale evacuation orders were lifted, property owners returned to see first-hand what was left behind and grapple with the uncertainty what came next.

    First came the two-phase cleanup process, which involved the clearing of household hazardous waste by the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency and the removal of structural debris, a task handled by the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers or through a contractor chosen by homeowners. According to the county, more than 10,000 properties opted in to the Corps of Engineers’ debris clearance program.

    Once debris was cleared, property owners who sought to rebuild embarked on a permitting process handled by various local governments, including Los Angeles County, the city of Los Angeles, and the cities of Malibu and Pasadena. The city of Los Angeles alone received more than 3,000 permit applications, 1,440 of which have been issued at the start of January, according to the city. Nearly 2,900 applications for rebuilding permits were received by Los Angeles County, 1,153 of which have been issued as of Jan. 2, 2026.

    Thousands of applications remain in review.

    The aerial images below show parts of the Palisades and Altadena after the January Palisades Fire and roughly one year later in later December 2025. Use the slider tool to view images from then and now.

    All images below are courtesy of Getty Images.

    Altadena and the Palisades, then and now

    Use the slider tool at the center of each image to switch views.

    In this first aerial image, the rubble of homes that burned in the Eaton Fire and a surviving palm tree are pictured on Jan. 19, 2025 in Altadena. The same area is pictured in December 2025 with a cleared lot and a remaining pool.

    In this aerial view, Bishop Charles Dorsey leads a prayer rally April 12, 2025 for the Altadena community and for his church in what remained of the Lifeline Fellowship Christian Center after the Eaton Fire. The same area is pictured in December 2025 with a cleared lot.

    Below, an aerial view of homes that burned in the Eaton Fire on Feb. 5, 2025 in Altadena and the same area as rebuilding continues on Dec. 28, 2025.

    An aerial view of an Altadena neighborhood that was mostly destroyed in the Eaton Fire on Jan. 19, 2025 and the same area with some homes rebuilt nearly one year later

    An aerial view shows homes that burned near two that were not destroyed in the Eaton Fire on Jan. 19, 2025 in Altadena and how the neighborhood looked at the end of December 2025.

    Below, an aerial view of homes near the Pacific Ocean that were destroyed in the Palisades Fire with some lots cleared of debris on March 15, 2025 in Pacific Palisades and the same area in December 2025.

    Below, a view of destroyed homes veiled in wildfire smoke as the Palisades Fire continued to burn in Los Angeles County on January 10, 2025 and the same area with vibrant green hillsides in December 2025.

    An aerial view of homes destroyed in the Palisades Fire on Jan. 27, 2025 in Pacific Palisades and the same area with cleared lots and construction in December 2025.

    An aerial view shows homes destroyed in the Palisades Fire on Jan. 27, 2025 in Pacific Palisades and how the area looks nearly one year later.

    An aerial view of trees and homes that burned in the Palisades Fire on Jan. 28, 2025 in Pacific Palisades with an aerial view of surviving trees and cleared lots on Dec. 22, 2025.

    The 23,700-acre Palisades Fre became the ninth-deadliest and third-most destructive wildfire on record in California. Twelve deaths were reported in connection with the Palisades Fire, which destroyed more than 6,800 structures.

    The Eaton Fire grew to 14,000 acres, leaving 19 people dead and destroying 9,400 structures. It is the fifth-deadliest and second-most destructive wildfire in California history.

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    Jonathan Lloyd

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  • Eaton Fire survivors band together to create community of support, healing

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    An Altadena neighborhood that was wiped out by the Eaton Fire last January led to the creation of a community of neighbors who’ve supported one another as they’ve navigated their grief and struggles since the blaze.

    The Alpine Villa Community lost most of its homes in the Eaton Fire – 29 out of 36, to be exact. But since then, residents from the community have gone from being just neighbors to close friends who are helping each other rebuild and heal.

    “It looked like a warzone, and sure enough, when we got to the property, it was nothing but the fireplace,” said Greg Apodaca, who lost his home of 15 years to the fire.

    “Acknowledging what had happened was also the acknowledgement of saying goodbye to the house,” said Alma Apodaca, Greg’s wife.

    In the days that followed, the couple and their neighbors were left with grief, shock and uncertainty. But it was this shared tragedy that brought them closer together. What started as virtual check-ins soon became in-person gatherings focused on resources, rebuilding, healing and support for one another.

    “We’ve heard stories since then, other homeowners had to go at this alone, but since we had this tight-knit community, it was safe,” Greg Apodaca said. “We could talk to people who had been through the same experience as us.”

    As flames ripped through homes in Pacific Palisades a year ago, firefighters acted on a moment of kindness amid the chaos. Karma Dickerson reports for the NBC4 News at 5 p.m. on Monday, Jan. 5, 2026.

    As they near the one-year mark since the Eaton Fire, those who are part of the Alpine Villa Community have reflected on what they’ve gained and what they’ve lost, and how the trauma has reshaped them.

    “Not only do I want to show up to be there, I want to show up to see these people and having the shared experience like community,” Alma Apodaca said. “Community means you show up for people.”

    The Apodacas said they’re looking forward to rebuilding a more sustainable neighborhood with fireproof materials. They said when they return, it won’t just be a home: it will be a stronger and more meaningful place.

    “It feels a little bit like we are going to be rebuilding in a community of gratitude,” Alma said.

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    Tracey Leong and Karla Rendon

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  • California man says bear refuses to leave home

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    Though the state of California has certain squatters rights, it’s doubtful they apply to the many black bears roaming Los Angeles County — and according to a man in Altadena, one of them decided to move into his crawlspace and has refused to leave for several months.Now, he’s accusing the California Department of Fish and Wildlife of leaving him to deal with the enormous creature on his own, and plans to sue, KTLA-TV reported Sunday.According to 63-year-old Ken Johnson, the bear moved in just before Thanksgiving, and has wreaked havoc on his property ever since, the outlet said. “I can hear the plastic being shredded underneath, and one of the cameras picked it up just bulldozing through it. It’s a mess under there,” Johnson told the outlet. At first, CDFW set a bear trap near the crawl space, but allegedly abandoned further plans to help after accidentally capturing the wrong bear, KTLA said. Just when biologists started using air horns to force the bear out — and appeared to make some progress — they were ordered to cease operations, Johnson told the publication. “I felt very defeated. I just dropped. Now what? It’s all up to me, and I’m supposed to watch my phone when he comes out in the middle of the night? Or sleep in the kitchen and listen for him every night?” Ever since LA County was ravaged by the Eaton Fire in January, several bears have taken residence in evacuated homes, the Associated Press previously reported, including an enormous bear that had been lounging by a man’s pool and bringing food back into the crawl space at night. Though temperatures in Southern California are too warm for most bears to hibernate, they’re known to shack up below people’s homes for shelter. In January, a CDFW team spent nearly a full day removing a 525-pound bear from another home in Altadena, the department said in a previous social media post. After capturing it with a trap, officials tagged it and released it into the wild. “In the foothills of bear country, it’s important to close crawl spaces with bear-proof material in advance of winter months to discourage bears from denning and damaging property,” CDFW wrote on social media following the incident.“Despite very limited staff, CDFW biologists have been in constant communication with this homeowner since this bear was reported entering his unsecured crawlspace in November,” department representatives told SFGATE in a statement Monday.“We remain committed to helping this homeowner and have never indicated otherwise,” they continued, adding that they’ve set up traps and cameras and attempted to haze the bear from the property.“CDFW has and will continue to engage with the homeowner to advise on hazing methodologies and the critical need to close the crawlspace, monitor cameras, and offer support to help ensure the bear leaves the crawlspace and finds more suitable habitat,” they said.But, according to Johnson, it’s still unclear when his unwanted roommate will vacate. After one of the cameras on his property captured an image of a broken pipe, he turned off his gas, he told the outlet. As a result, he hasn’t taken a hot shower since around Christmas Eve. “I’m just exhausted from the whole thing,” he said.“I get my mind off it for a little bit, and then suddenly I get flooded back with, oh that’s right, I can’t take a hot shower. I’ve got to monitor the situation all the time,” Johnson said.

    Though the state of California has certain squatters rights, it’s doubtful they apply to the many black bears roaming Los Angeles County — and according to a man in Altadena, one of them decided to move into his crawlspace and has refused to leave for several months.

    Now, he’s accusing the California Department of Fish and Wildlife of leaving him to deal with the enormous creature on his own, and plans to sue, KTLA-TV reported Sunday.

    According to 63-year-old Ken Johnson, the bear moved in just before Thanksgiving, and has wreaked havoc on his property ever since, the outlet said. “I can hear the plastic being shredded underneath, and one of the cameras picked it up just bulldozing through it. It’s a mess under there,” Johnson told the outlet.

    At first, CDFW set a bear trap near the crawl space, but allegedly abandoned further plans to help after accidentally capturing the wrong bear, KTLA said. Just when biologists started using air horns to force the bear out — and appeared to make some progress — they were ordered to cease operations, Johnson told the publication.

    “I felt very defeated. I just dropped. Now what? It’s all up to me, and I’m supposed to watch my phone when he comes out in the middle of the night? Or sleep in the kitchen and listen for him every night?”

    Ever since LA County was ravaged by the Eaton Fire in January, several bears have taken residence in evacuated homes, the Associated Press previously reported, including an enormous bear that had been lounging by a man’s pool and bringing food back into the crawl space at night. Though temperatures in Southern California are too warm for most bears to hibernate, they’re known to shack up below people’s homes for shelter. In January, a CDFW team spent nearly a full day removing a 525-pound bear from another home in Altadena, the department said in a previous social media post. After capturing it with a trap, officials tagged it and released it into the wild.

    “In the foothills of bear country, it’s important to close crawl spaces with bear-proof material in advance of winter months to discourage bears from denning and damaging property,” CDFW wrote on social media following the incident.

    “Despite very limited staff, CDFW biologists have been in constant communication with this homeowner since this bear was reported entering his unsecured crawlspace in November,” department representatives told SFGATE in a statement Monday.

    “We remain committed to helping this homeowner and have never indicated otherwise,” they continued, adding that they’ve set up traps and cameras and attempted to haze the bear from the property.

    “CDFW has and will continue to engage with the homeowner to advise on hazing methodologies and the critical need to close the crawlspace, monitor cameras, and offer support to help ensure the bear leaves the crawlspace and finds more suitable habitat,” they said.

    But, according to Johnson, it’s still unclear when his unwanted roommate will vacate. After one of the cameras on his property captured an image of a broken pipe, he turned off his gas, he told the outlet. As a result, he hasn’t taken a hot shower since around Christmas Eve.

    “I’m just exhausted from the whole thing,” he said.

    “I get my mind off it for a little bit, and then suddenly I get flooded back with, oh that’s right, I can’t take a hot shower. I’ve got to monitor the situation all the time,” Johnson said.

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  • L.A. Weekend Guide: Rams vs. Cardinals, Critics Choice Awards

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    Plus, Nikki Glaser at The Virgil and the Palm Springs International Film Festival

    Every Thursday, Los Angeles magazine curates a list of the best events in and around Los Angeles. Craft a great last-minute schedule with our Weekend Guide to L.A., and don’t forget to sign up to have the guide delivered to your inbox every week by clicking HERE.

    Los Angeles Kings v. Tampa Bay Lightning — Jan. 1 

    LOS ANGELESCredit: Juan Ocampo/NHLI via Getty Images

    The Kings usher in the New Year with an early evening game at Crypto.com Arena against the Tampa Bay Lightning. 

    Nikki Glaser, Patton Oswalt, More at The Virgil — Jan. 1 

    NIAJ24_RawHeadshot_PattonOswalt_v1_1500x2250pxNIAJ24_RawHeadshot_PattonOswalt_v1_1500x2250pxCredit: Courtesy Netflix is a Joke

    Nikki Glaser, Patton Oswalt, Doug Benson, Bill Dawes, Maronzio Vance, Mark Serritella, Karina Reyes and Faysal Lawrence inspire a laugh-out-loud first day of 2026 with stand-up sets at The Virgil. 

    Palm Springs Film Festival — Jan. 2-12   

    Amanda Seyfried in The Testament of Ann Lee. 2025Amanda Seyfried in The Testament of Ann Lee. 2025
    Amanda Seyfried in The Testament of Ann Lee.
    Credit: Courtesy of Searchlight Pictures.

    With a starry awards ceremony set for Jan. 3, the Palm Springs International Film Society’s annual festival showcases film screenings, panels and events during the first week of the year. Don’t miss sponsor Kering’s Women in Motion screenings of Hamnet and The Testament of Ann Lee. Ethan Hawke is also set to receive a career achievement award.  

    First3 Music Photography Showcase — Jan. 3 

    Pierce the Veil at the Kia Forum 2025Pierce the Veil at the Kia Forum 2025
    Pierce the Veil by Christian Waite, featured in the showcase.
    Credit: Christian Waite

    First3 celebrates touring music photographers with a photo gallery showcase in Silver Lake from 10 a.m. to 7 p.m. featuring works by Andy DeLuca, Ashley Osborn, Lauren Tepfer, Matty Vogel and more. RSVP on Partiful. 

    Los Angeles Clippers vs. Boston Celtics — Jan. 3 

    Intuit DomeIntuit DomeCredit: Kevin Mazur/Getty Images for Intuit Dome

    The Los Angeles Clippers take on Boston at its own court for a Saturday night game. 

    Los Angeles Rams v. Arizona Cardinals — Jan. 4 

    Sofi StadiumSofi StadiumCredit: Courtesy Los Angeles Rams

    Sunday at Sofi Stadium is all the rage when the Los Angeles Rams face off against the Arizona Cardinals for an afternoon game.  

    Altadena Forever Run — Jan. 4 

    LOS ANGELESLOS ANGELES
    The iconic 450-foot-long Hollywood sign is seen against the snow-covered San Gabriel Mountains.
    Credit: Photo by David McNew/Getty Images

    With proceeds supporting Altadena Eaton Fire survivors through the Altadena Eaton Fire Relief Fund, the Altadena Forever Run lets Angelenos reflect on the resilience and recovery strides of the city and the surrounding San Gabriel Mountain nearly one year after the fires began. Opt for the family walk, 5K and 10K races. 

    Critics Choice Awards — Jan. 4   

    Chelsea Handler at the 2025 Critics Choice Awards.Chelsea Handler at the 2025 Critics Choice Awards.
    Chelsea Handler at the 2025 Critics Choice Awards.
    Credit: Kevin Winter/Getty Images for Critics Choice Association

    Chelsea Handler hosts the annual ceremony honoring the best of TV and film, airing live on E! and USA Network 

    Melrose Trading Post — Jan. 4 

    Canter's Deli on FairfaxCanter's Deli on Fairfax
    Canter’s Deli in the Fairfax District, also home to Melrose Trading Post.
    Credit: ChildofMidnight via Wikimedia Commons

    Melrose Trading Post’s usual lineup of eclectic shopping also has a wellness through words workshop with Eclectuals Book Market at 11 a.m. (featuring an intuitive poetry writing session led by Dr. Meryah A. Fisher) and various music performances throughout the afternoon. 

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    Haley Bosselman

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  • Man fed up over 550-pound bear who refuses to leave his crawl space

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    A massive black bear has been living beneath a home in Altadena, California, for the past month. As Carter Evans reports, the problem has become unbearable.

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  • ‘It’s about giving back.’ Volunteers help Eaton Fire-impacted business after storm flood

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    Even with flooded roads, Christmas looming and severe weather across Southern California, do-gooders stepped up to help an Eaton Fire-damaged business after it flooded on Christmas Eve.

    In the true spirit of Christmas, volunteers raised their hands to help Adriana Molina, who owns Sidecca. The boutique, known for its quirky clothing and charming trinkets, was one of the few businesses on Lake Avenue that survived the brush fire in January. However, it was still impacted by the blaze

    While rebuilding the shop, Molina ran Sidecca online and at pop-ups to keep her business running. The store reopened for the first time this year in late August for a pop-up before reopening for good last month. Molina said she was ecstatic to have her store open again, but Wednesday’s storm forced her to shut it down due to flooding.

    “Now, it’s going to take us a while to get back again,” Molina said. “But, we’re going to do it, I think.”

    Molina was alerted of the damage after Manisa Ianakiev, an employee, called her and urged her to get to the store.

    “Walk in, and just 4 inches of water from front to back,” Ianakiev said. “Sadly had to call her in overwhelming panic, and I was like, ‘You have to come.’”

    The custom-made ornaments are for students and staff at St. Mark’s School in Altadena. Jonathan Gonzalez reports for the NBC4 News at 4 p.m. on Wednesday, Dec. 10, 2025.

    The duo posted about their woes on the store’s Instagram stories and word spread quickly. Neighbors and strangers began to show up to help Molina and Ianakiev.

    “It’s about giving back,” Eric Jackson, who stopped by to help, told the business owner. “And, Altadena’s gone through a lot. My family, my friends.”

    Due to the flooding, most of Sidecca’s products and furniture were damaged, Molina said. Aside from replenishing the losses, the building will have to be repaired once again.

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    Keenan Willard and Karla Rendon

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  • Rose Parade float has a firefighter, pancakes, syrup: Here’s why some people were upset

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    Atop the aerial ladder of a bright red fire engine, a firefighter wrangles a hose. From the spout pours not water but syrup, pumped from an enormous bottle. The stream of viscous liquid is aimed at a giant stack of pancakes 9 feet high.

    “Pancake Breakfast” is one of the dozens of floats expected to roll through Pasadena on New Year’s Day in the annual Tournament of Roses Parade. It was built by volunteers from Sierra Madre, a small foothill town that narrowly escaped the worst of the Eaton fire, which destroyed swaths of Altadena in January.

    The design is meant to honor first responders and their role in protecting the town, referencing the community pancake breakfasts that for decades have been a common practice in many towns and cities to raise funds for equipment, training, and fire safety programs while also helping to build ties between residents and firefighters.

    But some residents in Altadena have said the design — and particularly the audio feature, in which a firefighter asks for more syrup — is upsetting, because during the destructive fires many hydrants in their neighborhood ran dry.

    “To depict anything where we are running out of liquid is maybe a little tone-deaf this year,” Shawna Dawson Beer, the author of a community blog about Altadena, told Fox 11.

    “I think unfortunately this speaks to something that we fire survivors have experienced all year and that is a lot of action being taken on our behalf,” Beer said. “Ultimately, all of these folks with the best intentions and biggest hearts just need to actually talk to the survivors.”

    • Evelyn Shaffer, treasurer at the Sierra Madre Float Assn., which holds a contest each year to select the design of a float to be featured in the Tournament of Roses, found the float quaint and the Dalmatian standing watch by the red engine “just adorable.”

    Three active-duty firefighters from Sierra Madre will be standing atop the float on the day of the parade, she said.

    “I really regret that anyone had any distress over the float,” Shaffer said, adding that she felt that not all the information shared on social media was “fully accurate” and that descriptions of the float’s audio did not capture the whimsical tone.

    She said that, in response to criticism in recent days, the audio dialogue had been removed.

    “We don’t want anyone upset. This was not our intent. We took all the dialogue off,” Shaffer said. “So now you have the lovely glugging of the syrup on the soundtrack. That’s it.”

    Shaffer said members of the association vote each year on some 40 float design submissions that are in line with a theme put forth by Tournament of Roses officials. The theme of the 137th Rose Parade is “The Magic in Teamwork.”

    It’s one of only five floats in the upcoming Rose Parade that are built by volunteers from the communities sponsoring them.

    “We are very proud of the design because it’s an homage to our first responders,” Shaffer said.

    Shaffer said she hoped the changes made would allow people to enjoy the float.

    Lead builder of the float, Kurt Kulhavy, told KCRW last week that the aim of the design was to honor firefighters without re-traumatizing those who lost homes and loved ones. They opted for a lighthearted approach.

    News of the controversy online spurred some to speak up in favor of the design.

    “I was [a]ffected by the fires. Im not offended. There are much bigger issues in the world. I think the float is cute. Geez,” one Instagram user commented.

    But a member of the Sierra Madre float association, Dave Andrews, said in a post on Facebook last week that he was not a fan of the design and did not vote for it because it “seemed inappropriate.”

    He said he had been dismayed when he later heard the soundtrack of what he described as a “fake fire call” in which a fire engine is being dispatched to a pancake breakfast because they are running out of syrup, and that he and others had raised concerns to the board.

    In a post on Sunday, he applauded the float association for removing the dialogue.

    “Even though some people perceive [me] as the bad guy for speaking my mind, I respect them for making a compassionate choice,” Andrews said. “Bravo to Sierra Madre for listening.”

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    Suhauna Hussain

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  • Their templed destroyed in Eaton fire, a Pasadena Jewish community holds vigil after Australia’s anti-Semitic attack

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    1 of 6

    Cantor Ruth Berman Harris, Rabbi Jill Gold Wright, Melissa Levy and Rabbi Josh Ratnerwill (l-r) of the Pasadena Jewish Temple & Center gather to light the third Hanukkah candle during a ceremony and vigil as they stand in solidarity with the victims of the antisemitic mass shooting in Australia in Pasadena, CA Tuesday, Dec. 16, 2025.(Photo by Andy Holzman, Contributing Photographer)

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    Members of the Pasadena Jewish Temple and Center gathered at the First United Methodist Church in Pasadena on Tuesday, Dec. 16, to light the third Hanukkah candle and stand in solidarity with the victims of the anti-Semitic attack at Bondi Beach in Australia.

    The shooting at the Hanukkah celebration on Dec. 14 left 15 people dead, the youngest of whom was 10 years old, and another, a grandfather of 11 who survived the Holocaust.

    Rabbi Joshua Ratner led the gathering, held where the congregation meets after the January’s Eaton fire destroyed their synagogue and school.

    Temple families, their allies and partners held the first community Hanukkah candle lighting on Saturday, Dec. 14, in Sierra Madre, since losing their campus.

    Temple leaders said they will hold other Hanukkah gatherings for different age groups throughout the eight days of the Festival of Lights.

    Reflecting on Hanukkah, Ratner said the essence of the holiday is to remind people of their capacity to lights in the world. “It’s precisely at this time that Hanukkah calls on us to assert our capacity to light up the night.”

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    Anissa Rivera

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  • Failed emergency alerts during L.A. firestorms eroded public trust. How to fix a broken system?

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    During the first days of the January firestorms, Los Angeles became a case study in what can go wrong with emergency alerts and evacuations.

    In Pacific Palisades there was chaos Jan. 7 as people in the foothills tried to flee, only to hit traffic gridlock. Then when the Eaton fire erupted in Altadena, evacuation orders did not go out to residents of the west side until five hours after flames began to threaten homes in the area. All but one of the 19 people confirmed dead in the Eaton blaze were on the west side.

    Two days later a wireless evacuation warning intended for residents near a new fire near Malibu Canyon mistakenly was blasted out across a metropolitan area of 10 million people. Officials sent out a correction about 20 minutes later, but a stream of erroneous alerts continued to buzz phones throughout the night and following morning, stoking confusion and panic in communities 40 miles from any active fire.

    For many Angelenos, the chaos and uncertainty around evacuations and alerts compounded the terror of the deadly fires. But the snafus had a more troubling impact: eroding trust. Some residents turned to unofficial apps like Watch Duty. Others were so shaken they concluded they could not rely on the government at all.

    Los Angeles is not the first community to experience life-threatening emergency alert failures during fast-moving fires. In the last decade small towns in California, Tennessee and Hawaii experienced glaring emergency alert shortfalls as climate change has intensified wildfire risks.

    But the failures of L.A. County to issue timely and precise evacuation alerts — first to too few people in Altadena and then to too many — shocked emergency management experts across the country. Why was the nation’s most populous county, built on land vulnerable to intense fire, flooding and earthquakes, not more prepared?

    “What we’re learning is that, when the chips are down in some of the most dire scenarios, the people and systems responsible for public warnings don’t appear to be up to the task,” said Thomas Cova, a geography professor at the University of Utah who specializes in emergency management. “This would not be that surprising in inexperienced, unprepared, or under-resourced jurisdictions, but it is surprising in L.A. County.”

    The McChrystal Group after-action report on the Eaton and Palisades fires found the county operated with “unclear” and “outdated” policies when deciding when to send evacuation alerts, and its emergency staff lacked training and a clear chain of command.

    Nearly a year after the fire, however, we still do not know exactly what went wrong in west Altadena.

    L.A. County officials have failed to account for why alerts to west Altadena were delayed. And while independent reports have been published, they have shed little light, other than saying there were problems with coordination, staffing and training.

    “Without an explanation for west Altadena,” Cova said, “the specific lesson has yet to be learned.”

    The delayed alerts may not have been a result of one error.

    “Cascading failure is a common theme amongst disasters,” said Michael Gollner, associate professor of mechanical engineering at UC Berkeley who leads its Fire Research Lab.

    To prepare for the next wildfire — or any other catastrophic disaster — there are several steps L.A. County and other agencies can take to make sure they alert people in harm’s way.

    Improve coordination, situational awareness and training

    One of the big takeaways of the Palisades and Eaton fires is county staff lacked basic training and a clear chain of command.

    The McChrystal after-action report found the county struggled to adequately monitor events as they unfolded and lacked streamlined coordination tools. Policies and protocols on alerts, it said, were “unclear” and “contradictory” and did not explicitly outline the chain of command for decisions to issue evacuation warning or orders.

    The report recommended that the county update its policies and standard operating procedures and make sure that first responders and emergency management clearly understand their roles and responsibilities on evacuation alerts.

    It also urged the county to make the Office of Emergency Management, which operates as a subdepartment under the Chief Executive Office, its own department. Shortly after the report was published, the L.A. County Board of Supervisors approved a motion to restructure the OEM into an independent department. Its “lack of autonomy and fragmented authority,” the motion said, “currently undermines its ability to coordinate emergency management effectively.”

    To enhance coordination, the report also recommended the county establish a mandatory wildfire and evacuation training program for law enforcement and leverage technology for situational awareness training. OEM, it said, should train more people in essential Emergency Operations Center roles, such as alert and warnings systems and situational awareness.

    One way to improve coordination and situational awareness, Cova said, could be to train emergency managers the way air traffic controllers are trained with simulators. Another could be to use some kind of automated or artificial intelligence system to alert emergency managers based on where the fire is and where it is heading.

    Invest more funding in emergency management

    Many emergency management experts were startled after the January fires to learn that the L.A. County Office of Emergency Management’s annual budget is just $15 million. That lags significantly behind the budgets of similarly sized jurisdictions, such as New York City ($88 million) and Cook County, Ill. ($132 million).

    The McChrystal report dubbed L.A. County’s emergency staffing “fundamentally inadequate,” noting it has 37 employees to mitigate risk for around 10 million people.

    The L.A. County Board of Supervisors has directed the Chief Executive Office to evaluate OEM’s staffing and funding. The office is expected to issue a report in the next week.

    In an October interview with The Times, Kevin McGowan, director of L.A. County’s OEM, suggested that a lack of resources led to “trade-offs” and “coordination and communication challenges.” Boosting his budget and staff, he said, was a key priority.

    McGowan said he already started to create six new positions. That would bring L.A. County emergency management staff up to 43, a figure that still lags way behind similarly sized jurisdictions. New York City has more than 200 emergency management staffers serving 8.5 million people.

    Training on clearer messages

    Even when wireless emergency alerts were sent out during the January firestorms, many were written poorly and did not have enough detail for such a vast metropolitan area, according to Jeannette Sutton, associate professor in the College of Emergency Preparedness, Homeland Security, and Cybersecurity at the University at Albany who specializes in warnings.

    “Almost every single one of them is incomplete,” Sutton said.

    The biggest culprit, she said, was the message that echoed all over the county: It referenced a fire “in your area” without specifying a location and did not reference a time. The confusion the message stoked as it echoed throughout the county over the next 24 hours could have been avoided, Sutton said, if it contained more precise information.

    “An EVACUATION WARNING has been issued for Calabasas/Agoura Hills,” for example, instead of “An EVACUATION WARNING has been issued in your area.”

    Should the state or federal government step in?

    California has taken a number of steps over the last decade to improve local alert systems.

    After counties encountered a spate of alert problems as they responded to a series of destructive wildfires in 2017, the California Governor’s Office of Emergency Services published statewide alert and warning guidelines and standardized alert language. It also developed best practices for county emergency plans and set up the Wildfire Forecast and Threat Intelligence Integration Center to coordinate how wildfire threats are identified, analyzed and communicated to the public.

    But the state guidelines are recommendations, not requirements. State officials — and many local leaders — tend to resist the idea of across-the-board rules. The state’s 58 counties have vastly different geographies, populations and budgets, they argue, so it does not make sense to impose disaster preparedness plans from on high.

    Still, many experts say there is a need for a more unified approach to the nation’s patchwork, privatized emergency alert system. Some urge the federal government to step up, noting that problems with alerts are not just a local or state problem — jurisdictions across the nation face similar challenges.

    Training around alerts and warnings at a national level is extremely poor, Sutton said. While the Federal Emergency Management Agency operates the Integrated Public Alert & Warning System (IPAWS), the national system providing emergency public alerts through mobile phones using Wireless Emergency Alerts (WEA) and to radio and television via the Emergency Alert System, she said, its role is limited.

    “We do not have an organization that is responsible for delivering training at the national level,” Sutton said. “You might think that that’s the role of FEMA or of the IPAWS program, but they have focused almost entirely on technological capabilities of pushing the button and the message getting out through the broadcast. They do not focus on the messages themselves.”

    In May, U.S. Rep. Robert Garcia (D-Long Beach) published a report on L.A. County’s emergency alert failures and called for more federal oversight of the nation’s emergency alert system. In September, U.S Rep. Kevin Mullin (D-San Mateo) introduced a bipartisan bill, Resilient Emergency Alert Communications and Training (REACT) Act, that would direct FEMA to provide more federal resources and authorize $30 million annually for local emergency officials to improve their alert and warning systems.

    But the Trump administration appears to have little appetite to invest in disaster preparedness.

    “At the federal level, things have kind of stalled,” Sutton said.

    If the Trump administration follows through on its vow to make drastic cuts to FEMA, Sutton said, it’s not clear what will happen to the IPAWS program or whether the federal government will back off entirely from strengthening the nation’s preparedness for disasters.

    “Are they going to even focus on preparedness?” Sutton said. “Or are they going to say, ‘Hands off, we’re done.’ I don’t know.”

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    Jenny Jarvie

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  • 12/8: CBS Evening News

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    Trump responds after Marjorie Taylor Greene discusses their falling out; Altadena brings Christmas Tree Lane back to life after devastating fire.

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  • Christmas Tree Lane in Altadena Will Light Up in Sign of Hope – LAmag

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    Altadena will welcome visitors back to beloved Christmas Tree Lane, which will mark its 105th lighting ceremony after the beloved stretch survived the January wildfires

    Christmas Tree Lane – the oldest lighting spectacle in the United States, with nearly a mile stretch of twinkling cedars – will welcome visitors back to celebrate the resurrection and hope in Altadena, nearly a year after the deadly Eaton fire tore through the historic community.

    On Saturday, Dec. 6, Santa Rosa Avenue will once again welcome visitors to glimpse Altadena’s famous holiday lights, a way to celebrate resiliency in the face of such unimaginable loss. As many as 6,000 homes were lost, and 19 Altadena residents perished in the wind-fueled January wildfire. But the volunteers with Christmas Tree Lane Association have vowed to make the century-old extravaganza a must-see event with more than 10,000 lights lighting the path to recovery.

    “It’s about healing,” Jules McCulskey, 53, said of bringing the tradition back to the community. “We will rebuild. We will celebrate life. We will keep our neighborhood traditions alive.”

    Christmas Tree Lane Altadena
    For the 105th year, Altadena’s Christmas Tree Lane will come alive for a winter festival of lights and hope on Saturday Dec. 6
    Credit: Michele McPhee

    This year there will be a special ceremony memorializing what was lost in the Eaton Fire. But there will also be carolers, hot chocolate and a special visit from Santa Claus. Volunteers are still needed.

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    Michele McPhee

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  • Commentary: Up from the ashes: How fire survivors rebuilt in time to get home for Thanksgiving

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    A month or so ago, with construction crews still plugging along, Ted Koerner lost sight of the finish line. He wasn’t sure when he’d be able to move back home to Altadena with Daisy May, his 13½-year-old golden retriever.

    Koerner’s home was destroyed in the Eaton fire in January, but he has pushed and persisted, trying to speed the rebuilding for Daisy’s sake as much as his own. Whatever time she had left, Koerner told me back in October, he wanted her to spend it where she’s comfortable and happy.

    “She’s almost 14,” he said, and that’s well beyond the average lifespan for her breed.

    On Tuesday, they made it back home, and it was hard to tell who was happier.

    “She’s been out here doing zoomies,” Koerner said on the front lawn, his favorite place to spend time with Daisy at their hilltop home. He has his morning cup of coffee out there while Daisy sniffs around, works her guard duty shifts, and takes in the million-dollar view, which stretches all the way to Santa Catalina Island.

    Koerner said friends and neighbors would be coming by over the holiday weekend to help celebrate the homecoming.

    “A neighbor down the street, who didn’t burn, is cooking three turkeys,” Koerner said.

    When the county inspector showed up Tuesday afternoon and told Koerner he was clear to move in, Koerner activated the video tab on his phone and asked the inspector to repeat what he’d just said.

    “You have permission to move in tonight,” the inspector said.

    Ted Koerner, 67, drinks a cup of coffee with a mug that makes an appropriate statement after moving back into his newly rebuilt home in Altadena.

    (Genaro Molina / Los Angeles Times)

    Koerner is believed to be the first person to move into a rebuilt house in Altadena, where 19 people were killed and nearly 9,400 structures were destroyed. Another Altadena project, an accessory dwelling unit, was also completed this month. And on Friday, I visited the nearly completed Pasadena home of Jun Li and Bobby Lujan, who were about to move in.

    “We already made final inspection,” Jun Li Lujan told me. “I don’t want to miss any holidays.”

    She said her new stove was on the way, and she planned to go with a classic Thanksgiving meal of turkey, mashed potatoes and stuffing.

    “And pumpkin pie,” she said.

    Speedy returns are not the norm for victims of the Eaton and Palisades fires. The vast majority have either not yet begun the permitting process or are still in the early stages, and many are still undecided about rebuilding, due in part to financial considerations.

    In the Palisades, the first certificate of occupancy was issued recently for a “showcase” home that was built to market the work of the development company. Meanwhile, Palisades resident Craig Forrest, who lost everything in January, thinks his new house could be finished within a week or so, although he might not move in until the new year because the contract on his Santa Monica rental runs through December.

    So what’s the secret for him and others who have managed to rebuild in the same calendar year as the fires? In Forrest’s case, he said, the recipe included “fortitude, guts, will, strength, pushing through, making fast decisions, and having the financial wherewithal.”

    Having three teenagers was also a factor, Forrest told me. He said that rather than sink in despair, he chose to remain optimistic and keep moving to “show them what you do when something this traumatic and dramatic happens to you.”

    In the case of Jun Li Lujan, she had an insider’s edge. She builds houses for a living.

    Ted Koerner, 67, prepares to feed his dog Daisy May

    Ted Koerner, 67, prepares to feed his dog Daisy May. Koerner plans on having friends over for Thanksgiving. “The accomplishment alone is just getting home,” Koerner said.

    (Genaro Molina / Los Angeles Times)

    “Being a contractor, a designer and a project manager for many years, she knew what to do and how to do it quickly. … She’s a force of nature,” said her husband, Bobby Lujan, a musician and brother of the late Chicano artist Gilbert “Magu” Lujan.

    L.A. County Supervisor Kathryn Barger, who attended an open house at the Lujan residence on Tuesday, told me that bureaucratic hurdles and other challenges have hampered rebuilding efforts. But she met neighbors of the Lujans who were encouraged by their rapid return.

    “It gives people hope,” Barger said. “Next week, two homes are going to get certificates of occupancy. One leads to two, leads to five, leads to 10. I feel like we’re on that road.”

    Koerner had Daisy as a motivator, along with a figure-things-out mentality from running an investigations and fraud-prevention company that deals with government agencies and multiple businesses. And he knew he didn’t want to live in limbo any longer than he had to, especially after staying in an Old Pasadena hotel for several weeks with other evacuees.

    “Every single person in the building was a victim,” Koerner said. “Every time the elevator opened … there were people standing there, leaning against the wall, sobbing. And I mean openly sobbing.”

    Landlords in the area were gouging renters, Koerner said, and he briefly considered living in his car before one of his employees offered a La Crescenta space that had just become available.

    Koerner was told by an Army Corps of Engineers official to pour his new foundation as soon as the contamination was cleared, even if he hadn’t gotten an insurance check yet. You don’t want to be “number 2,200 in line,” Koerner was told.

    Ted Koerner, 67, sits in the front yard of his newly built home

    Ted Koerner, 67, sits in the front yard of his newly built home with his dog Daisy May in Altadena.

    (Genaro Molina / Los Angeles Times)

    That was good advice, and it fit Koerner’s personality. He’s not one to waste time overthinking things, which is best illustrated by his philosophy that a house is a house, not a museum to one’s creativity.

    “OK, are you going to spend nine days deciding what color toilet?” Koerner said. “Or are you just going to pick one and live with it. It’s a toilet. It’s not a trophy.”

    Koerner robbed his retirement fund to front the start of construction and said that once insurance payments are added up, he’ll be a few hundred thousand dollars in the hole. But he’ll be home.

    Whenever there was a pause in the county’s permit machinery, Koerner said he let everyone up to and including the governor’s office know about it. He said U.S. Rep. Judy Chu and Barger — one of whose staffers called Koerner “tenacious” — helped keep things moving.

    Koerner also credits building manager Jossef Abraham of Innova Creative Solution for understanding that this was not simply about building a house. It was about getting a 67-year-old man struggling mightily with displacement, and a dog on her home stretch, back where they needed to be.

    “We were here on Sunday for six hours, just us, and I brought a bed for her and I fed her here,” Koerner said. “And when I laid down on the floor next to her … she leaned over and started catching the tears, one at a time, as they were rolling down my cheek.”

    Koerner stood in his new kitchen, going through everything and everyone he’s grateful for this holiday season. The longtime friends who offered support, the new friends he made in La Crescenta near his temporary home, his builder and his therapist, who taught him “how to let things flow through and get behind you.”

    “I’m first and foremost grateful that Daisy has been strong enough to hang in there,” Koerner said. “She has just stayed with me, and that is an answer to a daily prayer.”

    Koerner and Daisy May frolicked for a while in his new office, which had a golden glow in the morning light.

    Daisy seemed to have turned back the clock and had that expression dogs get, mouth open and eyes aglow, when it looks like they’re smiling.

    Koerner looked like he was celebrating a double holiday — Thanksgiving and Christmas all in one.

    steve.lopez@latimes.com

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    Steve Lopez

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