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Altadena’s fire diaspora: Why some families left after the Eaton Fire
Jennifer Cacicio didn’t set out to move across the country.
Like thousands of others who fled the L.A. fires a year ago this week, Cacicio and her family left their Altadena home thinking they would be gone a night, maybe two.
But in the year since the Eaton Fire erased their house and neighborhood overnight, home has become somewhere entirely new.
Cacicio, a television writer, and her husband and 8-year-old daughter now live nearly 3,000 miles from L.A. — in Cold Spring, a village in New York’s Hudson Valley they’d never visited until this year.
Starting over somewhere completely new, Cacicio said, felt easier than rebuilding their lives in high-cost L.A. with the foothills of Altadena casting a long shadow.
“What we had in Altadena was so wonderful that anywhere else but Altadena feels like you're settling for less,” Cacicio said.
Cacicio is part of a growing fire diaspora — Altadenans scattered across the country and the world, searching for versions of the natural beauty and close-knit and artistic community they enjoyed in the San Gabriels.
Cacicio said she knows of three other Altadena families who’ve relocated to the Hudson Valley. Neighborhoods still edge up against the wilderness, but wooded slopes and river cliffs now define the landscape for them where canyons and ridgelines once did.
I also spoke with two other Altadena households who left post-fire, one for the Netherlands and the other for Asheville, North Carolina. Each family described decisions shaped by financial realities and the wrenching calculus of raising young children after a fire.
From Altadena to the Netherlands
The Sporcks left the Netherlands for L.A. over seven years ago, setting off on their American adventure.
Joep, a film composer, saw career opportunities in L.A, and his wife Sarah, was eager to try life in a new country.
Friends in Altadena introduced them to the San Gabriels, and eventually they found their own house in the west part of Altadena near the Jet Propulsion Laboratory.
Joep composed film scores and trailer music in a converted garage and Sarah commuted to her job as an education specialist at a school in Lincoln Heights. Three years ago, they welcomed their first child.
In the back yard, they planted fruit trees and raised chickens, and hiked along trails to favorite spots like Millard Falls.
“We loved it, and we never meant to leave,” Joep said.
This time last year, Sarah was pregnant with their second son and had just finished her first trimester when on Jan. 7 the couple saw flames shooting from the foothills.
The fire came within several blocks, but their house was ultimately spared.
In the month after the fire, Joep worked to remediate their home alongside professional crews, as Sarah looked after their toddler, whose daycare, Altadena Children’s Center, had burned down.
“With Sarah pregnant, it was really scary, even afterwards,” Joep said.
Added Sarah: “And with a toddler that wants to play outside.”
As they prepared for their second child, the fire forced questions: How long would it take for Altadena to recover and what would that look like?
“I'm sure there will be a new Altadena in a couple of years,” Joep said. “But it felt like it wasn't going to be the same ever again.”
Once-vague thoughts moved to the foreground. In the Netherlands, they would have more family support and a stronger social safety net, like lower-cost childcare.
And Joep had reached a point in his career that he could work remotely.
This past summer, after their baby was born, a listing landed in Joep’s inbox for a three-story brick villa in the southern part of the Netherlands where Joep is from — hilly just like Altadena. The couple made an offer for the house in Epen without seeing it in person.
“We made some lists like pros and cons of staying or leaving, and it was just we couldn't deny it anymore,” Joep said.
They put their house on the market — and after some price cuts — sold it to another Altadena family that had lost their home in the fire.
In November, the Sporcks moved to their Epen home, where they are still unpacking — and grieving.
“I’m really sad to be leaving America and Los Angeles,” Joep said. “It feels a little bit like giving up this dream.”
But he said the ties to the area are strong. Their children are dual-citizens. Joep will return to L.A. regularly for work.
“Part of us is now like American, Altadenan forever, I guess,” Joep said.
It's something, he said, that will always set them apart from their friends and family in the Netherlands.
From Eaton Canyon to the Blue Ridge Mountains
Altadena wasn’t their first stop in Southern California. There was Sherman Oaks and Highland Park.
But for Carson Dougherty and Chris Gower, their Altadena cottage rental within walking distance of Eaton Canyon was the first place that felt like home in L.A.
Pushing their daughters in strollers to Altadena Beverage and Market and Prime Pizza, they would stop to speak with neighbors along the way.
“I would walk around and just be like, ‘Oh my God, I can’t believe we live here,'" Carson said. “I've just never loved a place more or felt more welcome.”
Carson, a spiritual coach, had moved from New York to L.A. about nine years ago when she was an actor, accompanied by Chris who works in tech sales.
Carson is originally from northern Virginia, while Chris grew up in Surrey, England. The call of family always beckoned, but the allure of life in Altadena kept it at bay.
They had months earlier re-upped their lease for another two years, when the Eaton Fire happened.
The next day, they returned to find their rental standing — but coated in soot.
With no clear remediation plan being offered by the landlord and worried about their children’s health, the couple broke their lease and forfeited their full deposit.
As they planned their next move, Carson and Chris began rethinking what it meant to raise a family in California — from pre-school to housing.
“Life here is very hard,” Carson said. “We're obsessed with it, but it's not easy.”
Carson flew with the girls out to Virginia, and stayed with her parents. When Chris rejoined them, they discussed where they could live.
Using A.I., they researched cities within 500 miles of Carson’s parents that met their criteria for schools and property taxes. Starting with more than 50 places, Carson winnowed down the list by watching online walking tours of cities and asking for advice on social media.
Asheville, North Carolina — where she had once attended a wedding — kept coming up.
“But we were like, ‘We're not going to move to a place that just had a hurricane,” Carson said, recalling the devastation of Hurricane Helene in 2024.
After taking road trips to Pennsylvania, New York and New Jersey and feeling nothing was clicking, the couple traveled to Asheville. They were drawn to the Blue Ridge Mountains that ring the city and the artistic community that reminded them of Altadena’s.
“I was like, ‘OK, this is it,’” Carson said. “I don't know. It was just a feeling.”
Two months into living in their current spot in Asheville, they’re still adjusting.
“I can see this was the right move for us,” Carson said. “But it doesn't feel like home yet.”
“It still feels like a consolation prize,” Chris said. “Whereas Altadena was the one that we were like ‘Holy crap, we found it.'"
Giving her daughter home
In Cold Spring, New York, Jennifer Cacicio is also going through a range of emotions.
“I love Altadena so much, and there's so much grief in letting go of it,” she said.
She mourns her street of identical mid-century homes designed by the architect Gregory Ain. When neighborhood kids visited each other, they knew the exact layout of each others’ homes.
Jennifer estimates of the 28 houses in the neighborhood, about three-quarters are gone.
After struggling with the cost of renting or buying in L.A., she and her husband — a landscape photographer — began thinking about moving East, where she’s from.
During their daughter’s spring break, the family flew out for an expedition.
“We tried to frame it with my daughter, like, ‘You know what this terrible thing happened, and we're going to try to turn it into a family adventure and live closer to cousins and explore a new part of the world,'" Jennifer said.
They looked at towns within an hour or so of New York City, located in the suburbs of New York and Connecticut. In New York’s Hudson Valley, they visited an open house for a school that their daughter instantly took a shine to.
“We were like, ‘Great, let's just build it around that — like one thing felt right,’” Cacicio said.
Another sign came when Jennifer, who was the showrunner for this year’s Paramount+ drama Happy Face, got an offer to work on a show based in New York.
“It kind of felt like the universe confirming the decision in a way,” Jennifer said.
In September, they moved into their new home in Cold Spring. Cacicio puts aside her sadness when she thinks about her daughter.
After an event as traumatic as a fire, she wants her childhood to feel stable again. Altadena will recover over the next decade, Cacicio said, but later than she would hope for her daughter.
Being in a new place has brought unknowns, but also a sense of excitement.
"That was kind of what it came down to," Cacicio said. "It didn't feel like settling. It just felt different."