Southern California fires are only a fraction of the size of the state's largest blazes historically but could be the most destructive ever.
Early estimates show that the total damage and economic loss due to the Los Angeles wildfires could be between $60 billion and $130 billion.
The $750,000-a-year LA water czar is responsible for a raft of failures that contributed to the devastating Palisades Fire, ...
The two largest firestorms have already been ranked by state fire officials among California’s 20 most-damaging.
Early estimates show that the total damage and economic loss due to the Los Angeles wildfires could be between $60 billion ...
The Palisades, Eaton, Hurst, Lidia and Kenneth fires are burning in Southern California, destroying more than 10,000 ...
2018’s Camp Fire is considered California’s most destructive wildfire overall, according to Cal Fire. The 153,336-acre wildfire destroyed nearly 19,000 buildings and killed 85 people. When it comes to ...
Nearly a dozen people are believed to be dead and many more injured as several fires broke out across Southern California ...
House lawmakers are bracing for what could be a contentious battle over emergency spending in the wake of the wildfires that ...
Surveillance video and witness accounts are raising questions about whether the Eaton Fire may have been started by a downed ...
The largest of the blazes, the Palisades Fire, is more than 31 square miles. That’s half the land size of Washington, D.C. The Palisades Fire threatens thousands of structures and buildings inside the ...
The Los Angeles fires have destroyed thousands of structures, but are they the most destructive in state history? Here's what Cal Fire data shows.