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The Brief

The most important stories for you to know today
  • Disney's flagship fine-dining restaurant returns
    The reimagined Napa Rose main dining room with a grapevine chandelier of hanging glass orbs, carved vineyard murals, warm wood accents and leather banquettes.
    Napa Rose reopened Feb. 6 after a 10-month renovation.

    Topline:

    Napa Rose at Disney's Grand Californian Hotel & Spa reopened Feb. 6 after an eight-month closure and complete redesign. It marks the restaurant's 25th anniversary with a reimagined dining room, new tasting menu and expanded bar and lounge.

    Why it matters: Napa Rose has long been considered the pinnacle of dining at the Disneyland Resort and one of the more ambitious fine-dining destinations in Orange County. The reopening signals Disney's continued investment in elevating its culinary offerings beyond theme park fare, with leadership expressing aspirations toward Michelin recognition.

    The backstory: Chef Andrew Sutton has led Napa Rose since its 2001 opening. He now serves as culinary director of all signature dining at the resort, with Executive Chef Clint Chin running day-to-day kitchen operations. The main dining room offers a four-course prix fixe menu at $188 per person, with optional wine pairings from a cellar of nearly 4,000 bottles.

    If you're looking for fine dining, Disneyland may not come immediately to mind. But you'd be wrong.

    Twenty-five years ago, Disneyland opened its first high end restaurant, Napa Rose, inside the Grand Californian Hotel. Its chef, Andrew Sutton, had been plucked from Napa Valley, and it went on to build a reputation as one of the most ambitious dining destinations in Orange County. (Sutton is now the culinary director of all of Disney's top-tier dining in Anaheim — including the members-only Club 33 and Carthay Circle.)

    But after more than two decades, the restaurant had started to show its age — the Wine Country identity was baked into the bones of the room, but the cuisine and plating style felt more Y2K than TikTok.

    So last April, Napa Rose closed for extensive renovations. Almost a year later, it's now reopened with a new tasting menu, a reimagined dining room and expanded bar and lounge, under a new Executive Chef, Clint Chin.

    Wine Country, by way of Anaheim

    At a press dinner, General Manager Jess Soman was candid about his ambitions: he wants Napa Rose to earn a Michelin star. It's not such a far-fetched idea — he helped The Inn at Little Washington in Virginia earn three Michelin stars.

    The redesigned bar and lounge at Napa Rose, featuring a curved marble bar top, backlit shelves of spirits, Art Deco-inspired upholstered bar stools and ribbed wood ceiling details.
    The newly redesigned bar and lounge at Napa Rose, where the evening began with passed champagne and remarks from the team behind the reinvention.
    (
    Ron De Angelis
    /
    Courtesy Disneyland Resort
    )

    But another remark from the evening struck me just as much: for many guests, Napa Rose is their first fine-dining experience. That's a meaningful thing — the first time a sommelier explains a pairing without condescension, the first time a tasting menu tells you a story. If that's the role Napa Rose wants to play, then what ends up on the plate matters even more.

    The dining room is beautiful, anchored by a chandelier that resembles a suspended vineyard — glass orbs hanging from sculpted grapevine forms — glowing softly over carved murals of wine-country harvest scenes. The walls are lined with 3,800 bottles in climate-controlled cabinets. It feels warm and intimate.

    It's also, inescapably, inside a theme park resort. Somewhere beyond these walls, people are screaming on Radiator Springs while wearing a $55 popcorn bucket that lights up. All the staff were also wearing Disney name tags. That tension — between genuine culinary ambition and the Disney universe that contains it — is something I kept turning over in my head all night.

    $188, four courses, one question

    The tasting menu costs $188 for four courses, including an amuse-bouche and dessert.

    The first course was grilled fish served with lobster toast and a lemon bubble foam. Everything tasted fine together, but it was forgettable, the kind of dish that disappears from memory before the wine glass is refilled.

    Thinly sliced American Wagyu beef rolled over roasted red and gold beets with grape mostarda and green pea purée on a white textured plate.
    Thinly sliced American Wagyu beef rolled over roasted red and gold beets with grape mostarda and green pea purée
    (
    Ron DeAngelis
    /
    Courtesy Disneyland Resort
    )

    The American Wagyu N.Y. was a different story. Thinly sliced and rolled, resembling a fancy cut of pastrami, the beef's richness played well against the familiar, comforting roasted beets, and the grape mostarda added just enough sharpness. I noticed the plating too — more restrained than before, with dots of pea purée placed deliberately and real negative space on the plate. If this is what the new Napa Rose looks like, the kitchen has at least shed its previous aesthetic.

    Then came the sorpresine pasta with California crab broth and Pacific uni, and the evening stumbled. The sauce was watery and thin, the uni flavor barely there, the crab scarce — a few pieces struggling to justify the menu's promise. At $188 a head, I felt shortchanged. But the detail I couldn't shake was the bowl: a sea urchin-shaped vessel coated in dark black ceramic that, when scraped with the silver fork, produced a sound like nails on a chalkboard. At a restaurant that spent eight months and untold millions on a reinvention, the thing I remember most vividly from the third course is a noise.

    Handmade sorpresine pasta in California crab broth with Pacific uni, served in a dark sea urchin-shaped ceramic bowl on a white stone plate.
    The sorpresine pasta with California crab broth and Pacific uni. The bowl looked striking. It sounded less so.
    (
    Ron DeAngelis
    /
    Courtesy Disneyland Resort
    )

    For the entrée, I opted for the swordfish served with ancient grains, black lentils, and hijiki, a Japanese seaweed, whose briny depth complemented the fish.

    Seared sustainable fish with a lacy tuile over ancient grains, black lentils and hijiki on a bright squash purée, served on a white plate.
    The sustainable fish with ancient grains, black lentils and hijiki.
    (
    Ron De Angelis
    /
    Disneyland Resort
    )

    The meal concluded with what the menu called an "Elevated and Reminiscent" Valrhona chocolate bar with hazelnut praline. It's a very Disney move: narrate the experience so the guest knows what to feel before they feel it. It did deliver on its promise: lush chocolate with a delicate texture that was indeed reminiscent of a candy bar, in the best possible way. Or perhaps by that point I'd been fully indoctrinated.

    A layered Valrhona chocolate bar with hazelnut praline and a gold-leafed tuile, served alongside a quenelle of ice cream on a chocolate square, with swooping chocolate sauce lines across a white plate.
    The "Elevated and Reminiscent" Valrhona chocolate bar with hazelnut praline, with the name does the interpretive work for you.
    (
    Ron De Angelis
    /
    Courtesy Disneyland Resort
    )

    Who is this for?

    Ultimately, it all felt very competent yet cautious — playing it safe at every turn. Which may be exactly what you need to make a first fine-dining experience extra-special. But a restaurant gunning for a Michelin star needs to do the opposite — to surprise, to unsettle, to serve something a diner has never seen before.

    The reinvented Napa Rose seems caught between these two identities, swinging big on paper but playing it safe on the plate. I’m not sure the restaurant knows exactly what story it wants to tell yet. But the fact that it's asking the question might be enough for now.

  • Service fees are raising eyebrows for fans
    A view of an outdoor cement skate park near a beach, with a giant white logo that says "LA28" on it.
    Tickets to the 2028 Olympics in Los Angeles went on sale Thursday.

    Topline:

    As the locals-only sale kicks off and Southern Californians have their first chance to buy tickets to the Olympic Games, some fans are wide-eyed at the high fees on all tickets and the prices in general, which start at $28 but go up to more than $5,500 a pop.

    Sticker shock: Lori Rovner of Manhattan Beach told LAist that one $2,100 ticket had a $505 service fee, bringing the total cost to $2,604.63.

    Other prices: Some people LAist spoke with opted for only $28 or similarly priced tickets, even if it meant missing some of the biggest Olympic events. One user on Reddit said they purchased 18 tickets for around $550.

    Read on … about how much fans are spending on tickets.

    Lori Rovner of Manhattan Beach is a big sports fan, so there was no question that when tickets for the Olympic Games went on sale, she'd be signing up.

    She scored a slot in the first ticket drop, which launched Thursday, and logged on right at 10 a.m., hoping to score tickets to the Opening Ceremonies and some finals too. After battling her computer to get through "access denied" screens and a lost shopping cart due to a 30-minute time limit, she bought 16 tickets.

    It was only when she was about to purchase that she noticed the service fees, which were around 24% of each ticket. One $2,100 ticket had a $505 service fee, bringing the total cost to $2,604.63.

    "It's insane," she said of the fee. "I don't understand what the service is."

    As the locals-only sale kicks off and Southern Californians have their first chance to buy tickets to the Olympic Games, some fans are wide-eyed at the high fees on all tickets and the prices in general, which start at $28 but go up to more than $5,500 a pop. Opening Ceremony tickets start at $328.68

    The service fees aren't a surprise add-on. The price fans see when browsing the site is the total cost, including the fee. Still, some who bought in the first phase of sales were surprised when they saw the fees add up.

    One user on Reddit of shared their cart of 10 tickets, which added up to $11,264. That included $1,038 in fees alone. Commenters responded in shock and awe.

    Service fees are standard in ticket sales, but the percentage they charge can vary widely. High fees have been a source of ire for music and sports fans for years. A 2018 report from the U.S. Government Accountability Office found that the average fees on a primary ticket market were 27%.

    LA28 did not respond to LAist's requests for details on the service fee, like what it pays for or why it's a percentage rather than a flat rate.

    Not everyone seemed bothered by the prices. Some people LAist spoke with opted for only $28 or similarly priced tickets, even if it meant missing some of the biggest Olympic events. One user on Reddit said they purchased 18 tickets for around $550.

    "I went with all $28 tickets," they wrote in the online forum about the Olympics. "I got women’s soccer, gymnastics, beach and regular volleyball, track and field, baseball and a few others."

    For some, the ticket process, the prices and the dense web of events to choose from made it too hard to pull the trigger.

    Jeff Bartow of Sierra Madre made a spreadsheet with some competitions he was interested in seeing before he logged on to buy tickets Friday.

    "So many times, so many schedules, so many events," Bartow said. "I think I initially thought I was going to go to a bunch, but thinking about how crazy it's going to be … I might be a little more limited."

    This is just the first ticket drop. There will be more opportunities to buy tickets in the months to come — and on a resale market that launches in 2027.

    Some ticket-buyers told LAist they already were contemplating which tickets they'd keep and which ones they'd re-sell, just minutes after buying them.

  • Sponsored message
  • Why have there been so few arrests?

    Topline:

    In the more than two months since the Department of Justice released its latest batch of files on the investigation into Jeffrey Epstein, prosecutors have not brought any new charges based on the documents, despite federal lawmakers on both sides of the aisle continuing to demand accountability.


    The backstory: Since the release of the files in 2025 and 2026, there have been no related arrests in the U.S. However, the disclosures have led to some resignations and other reputational repercussions for some high-ranking Americans. The lack of arrests in the U.S. contrasts to the fallout in the U.K., where investigators have pursued charges related to corruption, not sexual abuse, in their dealings with Epstein. Two former government officials — former Prince Andrew and ex-ambassador Peter Mandelson — were arrested on suspicion of misconduct in public office.


    Lack of evidence: In the U.S., top Justice Department officials have said that they found no evidence compelling enough to pursue further charges related to Epstein, and that the public can make their own assessments based on the disclosed documents. In a statement to NPR, Justice Department spokesperson Katie Kenlein said that "there have not been additional prosecutions beyond Epstein and Maxwell because there has not been credible evidence that their activities extended to Epstein's network."

    In the more than two months since the Department of Justice released its latest batch of files on the investigation into Jeffrey Epstein, prosecutors have not brought any new charges based on the documents, despite federal lawmakers on both sides of the aisle continuing to demand accountability.

    The more than 3 million pages of documents include accusations by alleged victims of Epstein and Ghislaine Maxwell's abuse and thousands of emails and photos showing Epstein associated with prominent figures. The files indicate that many of these people maintained contact with the disgraced financier long after he pleaded guilty in 2008 to sex crimes that involved minors. Appearing in the files is not necessarily an indication of criminal wrongdoing.

    The release of the Epstein files came after Congress passed the Epstein Files Transparency Act, which forced the Justice Department to make public all documents it held related to Epstein.

    Epstein died in prison about a month after a 2019 arrest on sex-trafficking charges. Maxwell was convicted on sex-trafficking charges in 2021 and is serving a 20-year sentence. Since the release of the files in 2025 and 2026, there have been no related arrests in the U.S. However, the disclosures have led to some resignations and other reputational repercussions for some high-ranking Americans.

    The lack of arrests in the U.S. contrasts to the fallout in the U.K., where investigators have pursued charges related to corruption, not sexual abuse, in their dealings with Epstein. Two former government officials — former Prince Andrew and ex-ambassador Peter Mandelson — were arrested on suspicion of misconduct in public office. Andrew Mountbatten-Windsor, as he is now known, has denied wrongdoing and has not been formally charged. Mandelson has also not been charged, and lawyers for Mandelson have said that the arrest was prompted by a "baseless suggestion."

    In the U.S., top Justice Department officials have said that they found no evidence compelling enough to pursue further charges related to Epstein, and that the public can make their own assessments based on the disclosed documents.

    In a statement to NPR, Justice Department spokesperson Katie Kenlein said that "there have not been additional prosecutions beyond Epstein and Maxwell because there has not been credible evidence that their activities extended to Epstein's network. However, if prosecutable evidence comes forward, the Department of Justice will of course act on it as we do every day in sexual trafficking and assault cases across the count[r]y."


    On Thursday, President Trump announced that Attorney General Pam Bondi is out of the top job at the Justice Department, following bipartisan criticism over her handling of the Epstein files.

    NPR asked four former prosecutors and one former law enforcement officer why there may not have been enough evidence to levy additional charges. Here's what they said.

    Prosecutors must prove guilt "beyond a reasonable doubt"

    Prosecutors must prove to a jury that a person committed a crime "beyond a reasonable doubt," according to Barbara McQuade, a professor at the University of Michigan Law School.

    "One of the biggest misconceptions people have is how difficult it is to charge and convict somebody for a criminal case," said McQuade, who served as the U.S. attorney for the Eastern District of Michigan.

    A prosecutor's ethical responsibility is to charge cases only if they believe there is enough evidence for a conviction, McQuade said. Documents, including emails, jokes, and even plane itineraries, can be a place to start, but, alone, they are not enough to prove guilt, McQuade said.

    "What you would need [is] rock solid evidence," McQuade said. "You can't charge someone for a crime without sufficient evidence, and I have yet to see evidence of a crime involving an Epstein associate that has gone uncharged."

    Based on his understanding of the case, Paul Butler, a professor at Georgetown Law, said he agreed that prosecutors who investigated Epstein's alleged associates "may have believed that they couldn't persuade a jury beyond a reasonable doubt." He said problems with witness credibility or certain forensic evidence can prevent a case from moving forward.

    The U.K. cases are focused on corruption 

    In the U.K., the two people arrested are being investigated on suspicion of "misconduct in public office." McQuade said the U.S. does not have a single equivalent federal law. Instead, the U.S. prosecutes public corruption through statutes that focus specifically on crimes such as bribery and extortion.

    After the release of the latest files, British police began investigating Andrew's correspondence with Epstein when Andrew was a U.K. trade envoy. At that time, Andrew allegedly shared government itineraries, investment plans and notes from official foreign trips with Epstein. The information may have been covered by the United Kingdom's Official Secrets Act.

    Similarly, Mandelson has been accused of passing confidential government information to the late sex offender when Mandelson was a U.K. Cabinet minister.

    Meeting the burden of proof is especially challenging for sex crime cases

    Victim statements are essential for establishing basic elements, such as the timeframe of events, required to build sexual assault cases, said Diane Goldstein, a retired police lieutenant from California and the executive director of the Law Enforcement Action Partnership. But a victim may be reluctant to come forward because of a fear of retaliation, not believing the police can help, believing it is a personal matter, or not wanting to get the perpetrator in trouble.

    McQuade noted that in some sex trafficking cases, especially those in which a perpetrator is in a position of power, victims may experience intimidation or threats that prevent them from speaking out.

    Victims also may be hesitant to move forward with allegations because they fear having to testify at trials where defense attorneys may attempt to poke holes in their allegations, McQuade said.

    Goldstein said that for sex crime cases to advance, investigators need to follow certain policies and procedures. "If you don't have a legitimate police investigation to start, you're not going to get any type of criminal filing," Goldstein said.

    Other potential charges are also a difficult path

    Prosecutors may have considered pursuing charges of criminal conspiracy related to sex trafficking against people associated with Epstein, said Jessica Roth, a professor at Cardozo School of Law. FBI documents in the files relating to its investigation into Epstein's crimes identify certain people as "co-conspirators."

    But Ankush Khardori, a senior writer and columnist at Politico magazine who worked as a federal prosecutor on financial fraud cases, told NPR those identifiers are not "formal accusation[s]" and are simply part of "interim documents."

    "The FBI does not determine who is a co-conspirator," Khardori said. "That is a legal judgment that prosecutors make."

    But for those conspiracy cases, "criminal intent," in particular, is difficult to establish, said Roth, who worked as a federal prosecutor in the U.S. attorney's office for the Southern District of New York for seven years. Criminal conspiracy charges "would require knowledge and intent on the part of each individual who was charged," Roth said. If a person who communicated with Epstein had some suspicion that he was engaged in illegal activity, that alone would not be sufficient evidence to press charges, she said.

    Investigators may have considered charges related to criminal tax violations, McQuade said. But the statute of limitations has likely ended on those cases, she said, meaning that prosecutors can no longer bring charges.

    The current evidence lacks context

    Legal experts say the haphazard way the documents were released and redacted makes it difficult for the public to understand why no additional charges have been filed.

    Roth, the Cardozo law professor, said the information is in "isolation," without the appropriate context. "We'll see an individual photograph that looks perhaps incriminating. We'll see an email that looks incriminating, but we don't necessarily have everything that was said before and after that email and that exchange," Roth said.

    One document that could explain why no charges were pursued, according to Butler, is a heavily redacted DOJ memo naming "potential co-conspirators" of Epstein. "The parts that should indicate why the department declined prosecution on any alleged co-conspirators other than Ghislaine Maxwell [are] redacted," said Butler, the Georgetown law professor and a former federal prosecutor.

    Butler said those redactions are "unusual" because they do not appear to follow the permissible reasons for redactions in the Epstein documents. Those reasons include confidentiality for Epstein's alleged victims, or anything that would compromise an ongoing investigation, Butler said.

    "When the Justice Department grudgingly releases information when pressed by politics or forced by Congress, it also creates the impression that they have something to hide," Butler said. "That there is some cover-up going on."
    Copyright 2026 NPR

  • New report shows sharp rise in LA County
    Empty playground swings

    Topline:

    Nearly 30% more students in Los Angeles County experienced homelessness from 2022-23 to 2023-24, making it the county’s highest rate in the past five years and far outpacing the rate of homelessness across the state in the same timeframe, as the resources to identify and support this student population have decreased.

    Norwalk-La Mirada Unified: Researchers found that Norwalk-La Mirada Elementary Unified School District had the highest rate of student homelessness in the county — 1 in 3 students, meaning that over 4,700 students were identified as experiencing homelessness during the 2023-24 school year out of a total cumulative enrollment of about 15,600.

    Underidentifed students: Researchers also found that the Transformation of Schools focuses on the lack of dedicated funding for school staff to identify and support homeless students. Students and families facing homelessness do not always self-identify, whether due to fear, shame or being unaware that their housing situation is considered homelessness

    Nearly 30% more students in Los Angeles County experienced homelessness from 2022-23 to 2023-24, making it the county’s highest rate in the past five years and far outpacing the rate of homelessness across the state in the same timeframe, as the resources to identify and support this student population have decreased.

    The UCLA Center for the Transformation of Schools published two reports on Wednesday on the state of student homelessness in the county: “Rising Numbers, Fading Resources: Students Experiencing Homelessness in Los Angeles County” and “Hidden in Plain Sight: Fear, Underidentification, and Funding Gaps for Housing-Insecure Students in Los Angeles County.”

    Researchers found that Norwalk-La Mirada Elementary Unified School District had the highest rate of student homelessness in the county — 1 in 3 students, meaning that over 4,700 students were identified as experiencing homelessness during the 2023-24 school year out of a total cumulative enrollment of about 15,600.

    The city of Norwalk, where the district is located in the eastern region of the county, was sued by the state in 2024 for banning emergency shelters and other support services for people experiencing homelessness. Last year, the state reached a settlement with the city, which was forced to overturn the ban and put $250,000 toward building affordable housing.

    Student homelessness is defined differently under the McKinney-Vento Homeless Assistance Act, a federal law that requires every public school to count the number of students who are living on the street, in shelters, in motels, in cars, doubled up with other families, or moving between friends’ and relatives’ homes.

    As a result of this expanded definition, McKinney-Vento includes doubled-up students in the count of homelessness. Doubled-up is a term used to describe children and youth ages 21 and under living in shared housing, such as with another family or friends, due to various crises.

    There were a few other patterns seen in the L.A. County data analyzed by the UCLA researchers:

    • Latino students were disproportionately more likely to experience homelessness: they represent 65% of the county’s student population, but 75.5% of student homelessness
    • A third of homeless students were in high school
    • Many districts with the highest rates of homelessness had higher school instability but lower dropout rates

    While McKinney-Vento has an expanded definition that includes more types of homelessness than several other definitions, identifying students remains difficult.

    The second report from the UCLA Center for the Transformation of Schools focuses on the lack of dedicated funding for school staff to identify and support homeless students. Students and families facing homelessness do not always self-identify, whether due to fear, shame or being unaware that their housing situation is considered homelessness under McKinney-Vento.

    “A lot of these young people are dealing with a lot of trauma, so they don’t want to be identified. They don’t want to be pointed out; sometimes it’s scary for them, because they think we’re going to report them to the Department of Children and Family Services,” said L.A. County Office of Education staff interviewed for this report.

    School staff, known as homeless liaisons, who work with homeless students received a historic influx of federal funds during the Covid-19 pandemic — $98.76 million for California, out of $800 million nationwide, from the American Rescue Plan-Homeless Children and Youth.

    That funding has since ended, and there is no other dedicated, ongoing state funding set aside solely for the rising number of homeless students. This has led districts in California to “heavily depend on highly competitive and unstable federal streams,” the UCLA researchers wrote. Those federal streams have become increasingly precarious as the federal administration last year sought policy changes that would shift how they are structured.

  • Fire reaches 3,500 acres, forces evacuations
    Dark smoke rises in the distance in a wide view of homes and neighborhoods.
    The Springs Fire around 11 a.m. in east Moreno Valley.

    Topline:

    Multiple evacuation orders are in place for residents near the Springs Fire burning east of Moreno Valley in Riverside County. The fire was first reported around 11 a.m.

    What we know:

    • Acreage:  3,500 acres as of Friday afternoon
    • Containment: 5%

    Evacuation orders and warnings are issued for nearby neighborhoods. Here's the latest evacuation map.

    Keep reading... for more on evacuations and weather conditions.

    This is a developing story and will be updated. For the most up-to-date information about the fire you can check:

    Multiple evacuation orders are in place for residents near the Springs Fire burning in east of Moreno Valley in Riverside County. The fire was first reported around 11 a.m.

    As of this afternoon, the fire has reached 3,500 acres.

    West of the Springs Fire, a separate bush fire near Acton also began Friday afternoon. The Crown Fire has burned 280 acres and is 25% contained.

    The basics

    • Acreage: 3,500 acres as of Friday afternoon
    • Containment: 5%
    • Structures destroyed: None reported
    • Deaths: None
    • Injuries: 0
    • Personnel working on fire: 260
      • 2 helicopters
      • 36 engines
      • 2 dozers
      • 2 water tenders
      • 7 crews

    Evacuation map and orders

    The Moreno Valley College campus closed Friday afternoon due to air quality and evacuated all students and staff.

    Evacuation orders have been issued by the Riverside County Sheriff’s Department for the following areas:

    • MOE-0507
    • MOE-0747
    • MOE-0745
    • MOE-0641
    • MOE-0746
    • MOE-0744
    • RVC-0748
    • RVC-0826
    • RVC-0825

    Evacuation warnings

    Authorities say those who require additional time to evacuate and those with pets and livestock should leave immediately.

    • MOE-0504
    • MOE-0505
    • MOE-0506
    • MOE-0633
    • MOE-0637
    • MOE-0638
    • MOE-0639
    • MOE-0640
    • MOE-0743
    • MOE-0822
    • MOE-0823

    Evacuation shelters

    Valley View High School
    13135 Nason St.
    Moreno Valley, 92555

    Animal Shelter

    San Jacinto Animal Shelter
    581 S. Grand Ave. San Jacinto 92582

    Moreno Valley Animal Services
    14041 Elsworth St.
    Moreno Valley, CA 92553

    Road closures

    Gilman Springs Road is closed from Alessandro Road to Bridge Street, according to Cal Fire.

    What we know so far

    The Springs Fire was first reported around 11 a.m. Friday near Gilman Springs Road as a 5-acre fire that grew to 1,000 acres by 1:45 p.m.

    Conditions are fairly windy and dry in that area, according to the National Weather Service. Wind gusts reached 20 to 30 mph from the east. The Santa Ana wind event is expected to last into tomorrow.

    Listen to our Big Burn podcast

    Listen 39:42
    Get ready now. Listen to our The Big Burn podcast
    Jacob Margolis, LAist's science reporter, examines the new normal of big fires in California.

    Fire resources and tips

    Check out LAist's wildfire recovery guide

    If you have to evacuate:

    Navigating fire conditions:

    How to help yourself and others:

    How to start the recovery process:

    What to do for your kids:

    Prepare for the next disaster: