New evacuations ordered as LA’s largest wildfire expands
Published: 06:01 AM,Jan 11,2025 | EDITED : 11:01 AM,Jan 11,2025
A part of the wealthy Westwood area of Los Angeles came under mandatory evacuation orders Friday evening as the Palisades fire quickly expanded.
The area threatened by the wildfire expansion, the largest in the Los Angeles area, included the Getty Center and parts of the Brentwood and Encino neighborhoods.
Wildfires have ripped across more than 35,000 acres of the Los Angeles area this week, killed at least 11 people, and forced hundreds of thousands of people to flee from their homes.
California Gov. Gavin Newsom ordered an independent review to determine why firefighters ran out of water early on, calling the situation “deeply troubling.” President Joe Biden noted that the death toll might rise and that there were a lot of people who were unaccounted for.
The Palisades fire between Santa Monica and Malibu was 8% contained Friday. To the east, firefighters had contained 3% of the Eaton fire, near Altadena and Pasadena. Both fires now rank in the top 5 most destructive fires in California’s history.
It is not clear what ignited the fires, and investigators will probably take months to come to any firm conclusions. But power lines near the Eaton and Palisades fires were on when those blazes erupted Tuesday. Energy experts said that was concerning because electrical equipment has often ignited infernos during periods of high wind in California and elsewhere. And the dry, windy conditions that help the fires spread are poised to persist.
Here’s what we’re covering:
— The victims: Among those who died was one man in his 60s who lived in his childhood home and drove a bloodmobile; another man, in his 80s, was a retired aerospace engineer and an active deacon in his church; and a woman who was a retired pharmacy technician whom neighbors called “an angel.”
— Scale of destruction: The area burned by the various fires is larger than the footprint of San Francisco, Pittsburgh, Boston, or Miami. As of Friday afternoon, about 100,000 people were under evacuation orders, and hundreds of thousands of electricity customers were without power.
— False alerts: Los Angeles County emergency management officials said the erroneous evacuation alert that was transmitted this week went out to nearly 10 million residents or roughly the entire population of the county. The fires’ effects on cellphone towers could have caused the problem, the officials said, calling the error a “serious breach of public trust.”
— Federal response: Biden offered assurances that the federal government would help rebuild the affected areas, and Deanne Criswell, the Federal Emergency Management Agency administrator, said the agency was ready, and sufficiently funded, to support displaced residents.
— Arrests: At least 18 people have been arrested in the Eaton and Palisades fires, on charges of looting, identity theft, possession of narcotics, and possession of burglary tools, officials said. National Guard units have been deployed to secure evacuation zones.
This article originally appeared in The New York Times.