For the second time this year, Southern Californians are evacuating their homes as heavy rain threatens new destruction in ...
LOS ANGELES, - Wearing a respirator, goggles, gloves and white protective booties, Shaun Kearney gazed at his house in Sunset Mesa, a coastal community next to Pacific Palisades. It survived the ...
Wearing a respirator, goggles, gloves and white protective booties, Shaun Kearney gazed at his house in Sunset Mesa, a coastal community next to Pacific Palisades. It survived the fires destroying ...
LOS ANGELES, Jan 25 (Reuters) - Wearing a respirator, goggles, gloves and white protective booties, Shaun Kearney gazed at his house in Sunset Mesa, a coastal community next to Pacific Palisades.
The rainfall isn’t expected to cause damage this weekend, but officials still urge the public to stay prepared.
The fires, which began on Jan. 7 and are still not fully contained, have killed 28 people and damaged or destroyed nearly 16,000 structures. The rain will bring cleaner air and improve fire ...
"When it rains, they flow into our gutters, storm drains … eventually our beaches ... there are still frequent whiffs of acrid ash. Rain will help, experts say. "There is no downside, from the air ...