A combination of hotter and drier weather and more people living in places that naturally burn are making things complicated.
Californians live in the wildland-urban interface. And when fires sweep through it, they often leave destruction.
The devastation of the Los Angeles wildfires has resonated far beyond Southern California, as local officials and residents ...
Before 2008, California had never seen more than a million acres burn in one year, but that year there were over 1.4 million ...
Rain and cooler temperatures will bring relief to Southern California this weekend, after a prolonged stretch of dry, breezy ...
T housands of personnel—firefighters, first responders, and the National Guard—have turned their attention towards stifling ...
Experts in fire mitigation and climate science said LA should use the fires as an opportunity to design more resilient ...
The Great Lakes water supply lured Jamie Beck Alexander and her family to Duluth. Alarmed by three consecutive, destructive ...
Seven years before wildfires tore through opposite ends of the Los Angeles area, the Tubbs Fire in Northern California's ...
A CalMatters analysis has found that as of 2020, nearly 14 million Californians lived in the sprawling 7-million-acre zone that makes up the wildland urban interface. And when fires sweep through it, ...