Scores of Los Angeles residents have returned to the wildfire-ravaged Pacific Palisades neighborhood after officials began ...
For the first time since the devastating fire erupted, all Pacific Palisades residents are allowed to return home ...
Now harmful chemicals, which may include asbestos, lead, mercury and other heavy metals, are present in the ash that blankets ...
When disaster strikes, government emergency alert systems offer a simple promise: Residents will get information about nearby ...
This is a collection of photos chosen by AP photo editors.
Recent rainfall and increased debris from fire zones have prompted Los Angeles County public health officials to issue an ...
A line of vehicles stretching two or three miles snaked along PCH Tuesday as motorists inched into a parking lot for permits ...
When fire hydrants ran dry during the colossal ignition of one of Los Angeles’ most devastating wildfires, finger-pointing ...
Some Pacific Palisades residents said they waited on line for more than two hours Tuesday to get approval to go back to their homes.
After dealing with security delays at their mobile home park, Pacific Palisades residents were finally able to return home Tuesday after the devastating fire to try to salvage anything that was left.
Caitlin Doran grew up in the Pacific Palisades with her pet tortoise. She and her family escaped the Palisades Fire, but she and several of her relatives lost their homes.