A new rain storm is bearing down on California, including fire-ravaged Los Angeles, where residents are bracing for the possibility of mudslides and landslides.
What remains from the fires that broke out Jan. 7 is a charred landscape, filled with skeletal trees and blackened debris.
Areas scarred by the Eaton Fire are at “high to very high risk” of debris flows this week. How do they happen? What is being done to prepare for storms?
Thursday’s rainfall in Los Angeles County is expected to be relatively ... About an inch and a half of rain has fallen in the Santa Ynez mountain range, and areas north of Morro Bay have seen ...
When hills are healthy, vegetation can anchor the soil in place. But when that is burned off, hillsides become vulnerable to erosion, and slopes can come crashing down.
After the Southern California wildfires burned tens of thousands of acres last month, thousands of Angelenos are returning home for the first time in weeks.
How are neighborhoods near the Eaton Fire and Palisades Fire preparing for debris flows? See what goes into getting ready for heavy rain.
ANAHEIM, Calif. (AP) — The Los Angeles Angels have extended their lease at Angel Stadium through 2032. The team and the city of Anaheim, which owns the stadium, announced the decision Wednesday ...
In what is expected to be the most expensive natural disaster in U.S. history, several wildfires tore across Los Angeles starting on January 7, leading to dozens of deaths and destroying thousands ...