As animal shelters become overwhelmed due to wildfires, officials have flown 84 lost pets to Utah until they can be reunited with their owners.
Over 60 Utah firefighters are heading to California to help battle a series of devastating fires in the Los Angeles area.
The Santa Ana winds are expected to pick up again this week, making the Palisades and Eaton fires, among others, more difficult to contain as they continue to rage in Southern California.
She grew up in Utah and lives in Millcreek now, but for a couple years, her family lived n the border of Pasadena and Altadena, in southern California. "It’s more than I feel like I can really ...
A group of 64 firefighters from Utah responded to California’s call for frontline help with last week’s destructive wildfires, and find themselves on the ground in the Malibu area working to prevent the large destructive Palisades fire from spreading.
A second major fire erupted in the Los Angeles area as firefighters struggled to contain the Pacific Palisades blaze.
A new fire prompted evacuations Thursday in and around Los Angeles even as firefighters aided by calmer winds saw the first signs of successfully beating back t
Animal rescuers have helped save pets affected by devastating wildfires in Southern California by flying more than 80 cats and dogs to a no-kill shelter in Utah. The flight carried 26 dogs and 58 ...
A network of rescue groups are caring for animals affected by wildfires still burning in the Los Angeles area. A multi-state operation is under way to help relieve local animal shelters.
A day after firefighters got a reprieve with lighter winds than expected, gusts were hitting up to 35 mph (56 kph) on the coast and valleys and 55 mph (88 kph) in the mountains before dawn, National Weather Service meteorologist Todd Hall said.
Days after losing her home in the same fire that destroyed her Los Angeles elementary school, third-grader Gabriela Chevez-Muñoz resumed classes this week at an
We can’t acknowledge that death and destruction from wildfires and other disasters are routine, or we’d never be able to live in California.