The L.A. wildfires expose California’s difficult road to navigate between disaster risk and solving the state’s housing crisis.
At least 27 people are believed to be dead and more than a dozen others remain unaccounted for as multiple wildfires rage across Southern California.
Gardeners, housekeepers and car wash workers living paycheck to paycheck are out of work as LA fires damaged homes and ...
The Palisades fire wreaked significant havoc on the nearby city of Malibu. In an interview, Mayor Doug Stewart said that the ...
Somini Sengupta, a Times climate reporter, on her relationship with the city, its mythology, and a reckoning with disaster.
Two wildfires still burning in Los Angeles have torched more urban area than any other fire in the state since at least the ...
Two wildfires still burning in Los Angeles have torched more urban areas than any other fire in the state since at least the ...
The most destructive fires in the city’s history claimed 27 lives. Officials say that number will likely increase.
John Hope Bryant writes about how the solutions—creative, bold, and compassionate—to this devastating crisis are in our hands ...
Two wildfires still burning in Los Angeles have torched more urban area than any other fire in the state since at least the ...
Fueled by powerful winds and dry conditions, a series of ferocious wildfires erupted last week and roared across the Los ...