Next Up:
0:00
0:00
-
Listen Listen
Climate & Environment
The report concludes that the water supply was too slow, not too low, and even a functioning reservoir likely wouldn’t have stopped the Palisades Fire.
Listen
0:42
Sponsored message
More Stories
-
The Trump administration argues that rescinding the 2001 Roadless Rule will help wildland firefighters. Fire researchers warn that more roads could exacerbate the problem.
-
Another warming trend is on the docket that will push highs back into the 90s.
-
Hexavalent chromium is the same carcinogen Erin Brockovich warned about in the 1990s, but researchers say more study is needed on the potential health effects of nanoparticles detected earlier this year. Experts will answer questions at a webinar this evening.
-
Mostly cloudy skies today with 10% to 20% chance of thunderstorms for L.A. County.
-
LAist is surveying people who lost their homes during the fires. Here’s how to participate in an illustrated project highlighting your memories.
-
The Self-Realization Fellowship’s Lake Shrine, a historic interfaith outpost for spiritual seekers, has reopened after seven months.
-
Temperatures should be a couple of degrees warmer today, but the cool down continues Thursday.
-
There’s enough lithium in one year of U.S. mine waste to power 10 million electric vehicles.
-
By Thursday, SoCal will see temperatures around normal as temperatures cool slightly.
-
Homeowners want the state to act immediately and intervene more to help them recoup what they're owed from insurance companies.
-
An analysis of unemployment data from University of California researchers shows at least 11,000 workers lost their jobs in the wake of the fires earlier this year.
-
Grant funding allowed Arcadia's fire department to pay for the animal brigade to clear fire fuel this summer along Santa Canyon Road.
Philanthropic funds helped purchase a burned lot that used to have 14 rental units. Supporters hope the project can be a model for rebuilding equitably for renters.
Listen
0:42
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
-
Large swaths of the South and the East Coast are favored to see warmer-than-average temperatures, while the Pacific Northwest has greater odds of cooler-than-normal conditions this winter.
-
The Santa Ana winds have returned, and with them, elevated risks of fire.
-
The warnings are in effect until Saturday evening as gusty winds take hold.
-
Lawmakers say that seven people living near the landfill have developed cancer in the past six years.
-
A sunny, warmer weekend is in the forecast.
-
We rode along on a recent aerial spraying treatment in El Monte to get a sense of how officials are responding to the local outbreak in the San Gabriel Valley.
-
Today will be a few degrees cooler than yesterday.
-
It's finally sweater weather.
-
Over 4,500 square miles of ocean will be protected off the California coast. It will also be managed in partnership with the Indigenous groups that fought to create it.
-
The spill closed nearby beaches and harbors, and prompted the controversial cancellation of the city's annual airshow.