Salt water from the ocean is an option for fighting L.A.'s fires, but it's more complicated than simply going to the beach to ...
Questions are emerging about fire hydrants in Southern California that may have run dry. CBS News Confirmed's Melissa Mahtani ...
Firefighters scrambled Sunday to make further progress against wildfires that have destroyed thousands of homes and killed 24 people in the Los Angeles area.
"Governor Gavin Newscum refused to sign the water restoration declaration put before him that would have allowed millions of gallons of water from excess rain and snow melt from the north to flow ...
The wildfire season in Los Angeles has barely begun, yet the hills of the Pacific Palisades are already ablaze, forcing ...
The wildfires have destroyed thousands of structures in the Los Angeles area and have left at least 24 people dead, according ...
It will likely be a while before the investigations into the sources of the L.A. County wildfires are concluded, but there is ...
The death toll from the devastating wildfires in Los Angeles County has risen to 24, according to an update from the medical examiner on Sunday.
Hydrants ran dry because the city’s infrastructure was not built to respond to fires so large. A change in water management would not have helped.
Partisans want to blame things like “wokeness,” budgets or climate change for the disaster in Southern California. But it’s much more complicated.
February was the wettest month in downtown Los Angeles since 1998. With over 12 inches of rain drenching the city, it was the fourth-wettest February—and the seventh-wettest month overall—in the ...