Cian Lawlor's father was dispatched to the Palisades Fire just over a week ago and he's been working it ever since. The 11-year-old had some... A California ... at his home in Carlsbad, Calif.,
Evacuated residents are waiting in their cars for hours to get permission to return to Los Angeles neighborhoods devastated by the Palisades Fire, which has been burning for three weeks and destroyed thousands of homes and other structures.
CARLSBAD, Calif. President Trump is set to conclude the first regular work week of his second term by coming here to survey the devastation of the
The Hughes fire about 50 miles north of Los Angeles further taxed firefighters in the region who have managed to bring two major fires in the metropolitan area largely under control.
When the fires in Los Angeles broke out, fire captain Shane Lawlor was quickly dispatched to the Palisades ... Back at his home in Carlsbad, Calif., Lawlor's son, Cian Lawlor, is a fifth-grader ...
Shane Lawlor was quickly dispatched to the Palisades. He has been at work ever ... Back at his home in Carlsbad, Calif., Lawlor's son, Cian Lawlor, is a fifth grader and budding journalist at ...
It’s here, near a popular hiking trial, where officials believe the Palisades fire began around 10:30 a.m. Jan. 7. The remnants of thousands of burned-out homes line the path the flames took down from the hillside as it charged all the way to the ocean.
Local small businesses and lifelong homes in the Pacific Palisades were the heart and soul of the community and without them the heavily intertwined town may never be the same. Many business
A line of vehicles stretching two or three miles snaked along PCH Tuesday as motorists inched into a parking lot for permits to drive into the burn zone.
Some Pacific Palisades residents said they waited on line for more than two hours Tuesday to get approval to go back to their homes.
Recovery efforts continue in Southern California as the fires that ravaged the state have now largely gone out. William Brangham reports from the Los Angeles area where he has been speaking to people who are hoping to get back to their homes to see the damage.
For the first time since the devastating Palisades fire ignited on Jan. 7, all Pacific Palisades residents can now return to their properties.