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Powered by Santa Ana winds and dry air, the Woolsey Fire, which erupted Thursday afternoon in Ventura County before it raced into Los Angeles County, chewed its way through brush and into ...
Having claimed at least 1,500 structures, the Woolsey Fire is now far and away the most destructive wildfire ever to sweep through Los Angeles County. It is the “largest fire on record,” Los ...
5:20 p.m. This article was updated with a new acreage estimate for the Woolsey fire and a quote from Los Angeles County Fire Chief Daryl Osby. 4:00 p.m.: This article was updated with details from ...
The Woolsey Fire began Thursday in the hills of eastern Ventura County and burned into Los Angeles County, destroying homes and other buildings on its way toward the ocean. Use the maps below to ...
Like the Pacific Palisades Fire, the Woolsey Fire was fanned by the Santa Ana winds. The Sayre Fire, which broke out in the Sylmar section of Los Angeles burned 11,262 acres and consumed over 600 ...
Firefighters try to keep embers from spreading to houses off Wembly Avenue and Lindero Canyon Road Thursday night as the Woolsey fire rages. The report was the result of a motion by Los Angeles ...
The largest of the two blazes, the Woolsey Fire, grew to 85,500 acres on Sunday after spreading south from Simi Valley in Ventura County to Agoura Hills in Los Angeles County, where the flames ...
The Woolsey Fire broke out near Simi Valley on November 8, and, over the next two weeks, it consumed an estimated 96,949 acres in Los Angeles and Ventura counties. Today, it is largely contained.
Sep 3, 2019 Redacted Text Messages Between Mayor, Fire Chief Raising Concerns A number of text message exchanges between Los Angeles Mayor Eric Garcetti and firefighters during the Woolsey fire ...
Two wildfires still burning in Los Angeles have torched more urban area than any other fire in the state since at least the mid-1980s, an Associated Press analysis shows. The Eaton and Palisades fires ...
Donate now. It’s been five years since the Woolsey Fire tore across Los Angeles and Ventura counties, killing three people and destroying more than 1,600 structures. Since then, we’ve been ...
Los Angeles' budget is in the spotlight as multiple ... the Tubbs Fire in 2017 cost $8.7 billion and the Woolsey Fire in 2018 cost $4.2 billion. FOX News' Anders Hagstrom and Kristen Altus ...