Next Up:
0:00
0:00
-
Listen Listen
Climate & Environment
The U.S. didn't send delegates to this year's world climate conference called COP30. But that void is being filled by leaders from state and cities including California.
Sponsored message
More Stories
-
A project in Orange County is working to seed and harvest native Olympia oysters, which help stabilize shorelines.
-
Californians, your newest state symbols are the native big berry manzanita and the giant garter snake.
-
The National Weather Service says the storm will likely pass over northern L.A. County early next week.
-
The report is quite critical, documenting how systemic problems endangered the lives of firefighters and the public.
-
From asthma to psychological distress, wildfires take a toll.
-
SoCal Edison says it will announce its compensation program sometime this fall.
-
Any showers or thunderstorms will likely be for the afternoon.
-
The release comes the same day federal prosecutors charged a man in connection with starting an earlier blaze that became the Palisades Fire.
-
Fires can smolder underground for months. "It really is more common than I think people realize,” a fire scientist says. “It just doesn’t usually reignite another fire."
-
The Palisades Fire erupted on Jan. 7 and went on to kill 12 people and destroy more than 6,800 homes and buildings.
-
Remnants from Hurricane Priscilla could bring showers and thunderstorms to the region Thursday.
-
All disasters are chaotic, but an LAist review of reports produced after two wildfire incidents found similar shortcomings and similar recommendations about how to fix them.
It’s not easy to add green space where it’s most needed. The small city of South Gate is a success story — and a model for the region.
Listen
3:56
Support your source for local news!
In case you missed it
-
911 recordings obtained by LAist shed light on why and how emergency planning continues to leave people with disabilities behind.
-
LAist investigates illicit dumping at three Antelope Valley sites.
-
An LAist investigation found toxic heavy metals in samples of fire retardant collected from the Palisades, Eaton and Franklin fires. Here's what that means.
More Stories
-
Ways to cook, recycle and even donate your pumpkin.
-
California regulators keep tabs on hazardous waste, kind of like how consumers track packages -- even on a short journey. What happens if regulators require less tracking?
-
The utility, whose equipment is believed to have sparked the Eaton Fire, says payouts could come four months after people submit a claim. Accepting the money would mean foregoing a lawsuit.Listen 0:41
-
The decades-long effort will boost local water supplies and could also help replenish Mono Lake in the Sierra Nevada.Listen 0:44
-
The Trump Administration pulled $1.2 billion from California’s hydrogen hub. Even without federal funding, the Los Angeles Department of Water and Power is pressing ahead with clean energy retrofits.
-
The federal government pulled $1.2 billion in hydrogen funding for California. Los Angeles is pressing ahead anyway — starting with the Scattergood power plant.
-
Southern California's infamous northeasterly winds are expected to pick up Monday night and last through Thursday.Listen 0:41
-
The action followed months of attempts to reduce the number of livestock attacks, including diversionary feeding, use of drones and 24/7 field presence.
-
The Trump administration has finalized a plan to open the coastal plain of Alaska's Arctic National Wildlife Refuge to oil and gas drilling, renewing long-simmering debate over whether to drill in one of the nation's most sensitive wilderness areas.
-
Debate continues about zone zero, the California rules nearing the finish line that would regulate what can be planted and stored within 5 feet of millions of homes.Listen 0:44