As I watch the Los Angeles fires unfold, I’m painfully reminded that these challenges are universal. Fire doesn’t recognize borders, and neither should our solutions.
A study published in JAMA Neurology has discovered a troubling new health concern: prolonged exposure to wildfire smoke may ...
Firefighters in San Bernardino County saved a young girl with functional needs who was trapped inside a home as flames gutted ...
Friends and relatives remember the lives lost in the Eaton and Palisades fires, the most destructive fires in Los Angeles ...
At least 29 people have died in the fires across the Los Angeles area. At least two of the people killed in the Southern ...
As human-driven warming fuels extreme weather patterns across the West — including fires and record heat — outdoor ...
A fire at the Martinez Refining Company in Martinez, Calif., left six people injured. The incident also caused the city of ...
The fires in California have been devastating for many small business owners and others who saw their homes, businesses or livelihoods go up in smoke.
Recent studies point to troubling links between wildfire smoke and serious health risks, including brain function, mental ...
Data reviewed by Caltech scientists found spikes of lead, chlorine and bromine in the air after the Eaton fire started.
Orlando Mayorquín, a California native who has been covering the wildfires, reflects on the Palisades that lives on only in ...
Of the over 16,000 structures destroyed in the recent rash of wildfires in Southern California, many cannabis businesses were ...