The Altadena fire wiped out much of a historic black enclave in this picturesque town in the San Gabriel Valley.
When the Eaton Fire blazed through Altadena earlier this month it took more than homes and memories — it devastated a city that has long been a haven for Black families.
Thousands of Pasadena students returned to their classrooms on Thursday for the first time since the Eaton Fire started.
Ken Bensinger, a politics reporter based in Los Angeles, explores the pain of families digging through the rubble.
Moments after the morning bell rang Thursday, the kindergartners at Pasadena’s Willard Elementary School — back in class for the first time since the Eaton fire roared through the area — were fully ...
Hundreds of Pasadena Unified School District teachers and staff came together Wednesday, Jan. 22, for a “welcome back” event on the eve of reopening after the Eaton fire forced a districtwide closure ...
Following the destruction of the Eaton Fire, Pasadena city officials announced the cancellation of the parade portion of the ...
The fires in Los Angeles are almost out. Residents are starting to trickle back into their burned-out neighborhoods. When they get to their houses, they face a series of almost impossible questions: ...
In the 1980s and ‘90s, gentrification priced Black residents out of the area, and many moved farther inland. Many of those ...
Firefighters in Southern California readied for another round of critical fire weather after calmer than expected winds ...
Today’s climate driven disasters are the result of more than a century of extracting and burning fossil fuels,' says Altadena ...
Millions of Southern Californians were on edge as winds began picking up during a final round of dangerous fire weather ...