Another round of fire weather could last for much of next week in Southern California, bringing new dangers as Pacific Palisades, Altadena and surrounding communities struggle to assess the damage of devastating wildfires earlier this month.
Deadly wind-driven brush fires throughout Los Angeles County continue to burn and several neighborhoods remain without power in and around the Valley due to Power Safety Power Shutoffs (PSPS).
Extreme fire conditions remain in the Southern California region as high winds have prompted a "Particularly Dangerous Situation" red flag warning,​ weather officials say.
8:31 p.m. PT: According to the Los Angeles County Sheriff's Office, as of Jan. 16, 31 active missing person cases are under investigation. 24 cases are from the Eaton Fire and seven from the Palisades Fire. 8:00 p.m. PT: FOX 11’s Matthew Seedorff got an inside look at Cal Fire’s firefighting helicopter.
The death toll from the fires burning in Los Angeles County increased to at least 25 on Tuesday, according to officials, as dangerous winds were expected to blow into Wednesday.
Parking enforcement has temporarily been lifted in many parts of Los Angeles County ... out of it.” Santa Ana winds are normal and common for this time of year in Southern California, but ...
Forecasters paused the "particularly dangerous situation" extreme fire weather warning for Los Angeles and Ventura counties Tuesday afternoon, but warned that winds are expected to pick back up.
Southern California braced for another round of wicked Santa Ana winds after three wildfires erupted on Tuesday.
One of the teen suspects may have died in a head-on collision with a van in Santa Clarita less than an hour later, officials say
While winds will be weaker on Thursday, another Santa Ana wind event is forecasted for Friday, with wind advisories likely in the Santa Clarita Valley to Point Mugu area from early morning to early afternoon, according to the NWS Los Angeles.