John Ramos reports on the bureaucracy survivors of the 2018 Camp Fire in Paradise have struggled with due to their PG&E ...
Watching those towns burn on TV and listening to, ‘No rain in a long time; 85 mph winds; can’t get air support up … (It’s) ...
As fires continue to burn in Los Angeles County, the devastation is a painful reminder for survivors of the Camp Fire.
In addition to the loss of homes, property and irreplaceable keepsakes, fire victims are also faced with navigating a frustrating government bureaucracy in their recovery effort.
Paradise is six years into rebuilding its town, and since then, leaders have improved on evacuation procedures, learned how ...
The L.A.-area fires may pose the first big test of California’s wildfire fund, which was set up in 2019 to protect utilities ...
Because PG&E was found liable for the fire ... But in 2018 -- the same year as the Camp Fire -- the Trump administration removed attorneys' fees as a tax exempt expense, meaning wildfire victims ...
Southern California Edison is the latest power company in crisis, as climate change becomes an increasingly existential ...
The Camp Fire, which started because of a downed PG&E power line on Nov. 8, 2018, burned more than 153,000 acres, destroyed 13,500 homes and killed 85 people, effectively leveling Paradise and some ...
No official causes yet for LA fires, but utilities have a deadly history of sparking blazes. Cut the power and bury the lines ...
Residents in the wildfire-ravaged communities of Altadena and Pasadena witnessed flames near the base of a transmission line ...