When fires swept through Altadena, in Los Angeles County, generational wealth and a place of opportunity for people of color, went up in smoke.
Cindy Carcamo is a staff writer in Food for the Los Angeles Times. She most recently covered immigration issues as a Metro reporter and, before that, served as Arizona bureau chief and national correspondent in the Southwest. A Los Angeles native, she has reported in Argentina, Guatemala, Honduras and Mexico, and is a former staff writer at the Orange County Register. Albert Brave Tiger Lee is a Southern California native, son of Korean immigrants, a father and a staff videographer at the Los Angeles Times. His work spans various mediums of visual storytelling and has been recognized for various disciplines including a national Emmy Award for News and Documentary, an RFK Journalism Award, Pictures of the Year International honors, the National Press Photographers Assn.’s Best of Photojournalism Award and Columbia University’s Dart Award.
Battalion Chief Rich Jones is sharing what he has experienced during his three weeks fighting the California wildfires that have burned through Altadena and Palisades. FOX 10's Lindsey Ragas has more.
Two brave firefighters from Prescott Valley, Arizona, have returned from Southern California, where they faced the region's most catastrophic wildfire. Captain Sean Jones and his Central Arizona Fire crew joined forces with international teams to confront a wind-driven conflagration that caused widespread destruction in Los Angeles.
Defiant and armed Los Angeles homeowners in the scorched Altadena community have taken to the streets to defend the homes that remain standing — even if those streets have been blocked off by a police line amid evacuation orders and raging wildfires, residents say.
PHOENIX (AZFamily) — After Aveson Charter School in Altadena, California, was destroyed in the Eaton Fire, a Phoenix charter school is stepping up to “adopt” the students and staff from the ...
Two Prescott Valley firefighters are back home after helping battle one of the most destructive wildfires in Southern California’s history.
These Californians didn't lose their homes in the Eaton Fire. They are now grappling with how to live, work and recover amid the wreckage in Altadena.
They told me they are moving to Arizona because they can ... Los Angeles area fires will be the worst in California history. But considering what Altadena residents face now, the 2018 blaze ...
We were there for 12 days giving the folks of Altadena everything we had." Jones was there from the beginning and he's leading one of the eight Arizona task forces sent to California. Jones says ...
Community members to put their tech skills and cameras to work, creating an online map of about 15,000 homes in the Eaton Fire zone that allows users to click through to current photos of those properties.
Aerial footage taken from a helicopter flight over fire-damaged areas on Wednesday (January 22) showed the extent of damage and devastation in the city of Altadena, California, which bore the brunt of the Eaton Fire.