Next Up:
0:00
0:00
-
Listen Listen
-
Listen Listen
Eaton Fire: A rebuilding journey
Josie Huang, weekend host for LAist 89.3 and a veteran reporter, is among the thousands of people to lose her home in the devastating fires that hit L.A. in January 2025. She shares the journey as she and Altadena neighbors work to rebuild.
Listen
5:41
Reporting on the fire that destroyed my neighborhood
Josie Huang returns to her burned out street as she and others navigate losing their Altadena homes in the Eaton Fire.
-
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.
-
The program will launch later this fall, but the utility says it wants to gather community feedback on things like eligibility criteria first.
-
LAist is surveying people who lost their homes during the fires. Here’s how to participate in an illustrated project highlighting your memories.
-
After the LA fires, mortgage companies promised to give devastated homeowners a break. Some have notBorrowers who lost homes tell LAist their banks are not following the rules of a state mortgage relief program. Some have been told they could face foreclosure.
-
After fire destroyed her June Bug tattoo studio, Isabela Livingstone regrouped — and began offering healing ink to fellow fire survivors.
More Stories
-
An LAPD after-action report lists arrests and reports of crime, and also documents and makes recommendations on the department’s challenges in responding to the disaster.
-
For family childcare providers who ran their daycares out their homes, it’s been hard to open back up months after the fire since they remain displaced.
-
The Lachman Fire reignited several days after firefighters responded to it, becoming the deadly and destructive Palisades Fire.
-
"I looked to my left and it's like hell," one bus driver told us. Some facilities had outdated emergency plans, according to available public records reviewed by LAist.
-
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.
-
A Bengali immigrant who was displaced by the Eaton Fire now could be deported after falling victim to a green card scam years ago.
-
Felisa Wright lost her home and her livelihood in the Eaton Fire. She didn't stop fighting to return.
-
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.
-
A new study addresses the question, concluding that climate change increased the likelihood of the fires and boosted the amount of land that burned.
-
An effort to bring free clothes, toiletries and a sense of normalcy to girls displaced by January’s fires now has a physical home in Old Town Pasadena.