With their Los Angeles-area homes still smoldering, families return to 
		search the ruins for memories
		
		 
		Send a link to a friend  
 
		
		
		 [January 11, 2025]  
		By MANUEL VALDES, JULIE WATSON, JOHN SEEWER and HEATHER 
		HOLLINGSWORTH 
		
		LOS ANGELES (AP) — Many watched their homes burn on television in a 
		state of shock. 
		 
		Since the flames erupted in and around Los Angeles, scores of residents 
		have returned to their still smoldering neighborhoods even as the threat 
		of new fires persisted and the nation's second-largest city remained 
		unsettled. For some, it was a first look at the staggering reality of 
		what was lost as the region of 13 million people grapples with the 
		gargantuan challenge of overcoming the disaster and rebuilding. 
		 
		Calmer winds enabled firefighters to start gaining some control of the 
		biggest blazes in metropolitan LA on Friday before gusty weather returns 
		over the weekend to an area that hasn’t seen rain in more than eight 
		months. But by Friday evening, new evacuations were ordered in an area 
		that includes part of Interstate 405 after a flare up on the eastern 
		side of the Palisades Fire. 
		 
		Bridget Berg, who was at work when she saw on TV her house in Altadena 
		erupt in flames, came back for the first time with her family two days 
		later “just to make it real.” 
		 
		Their feet crunched across the broken bits of what had been their home 
		for 16 years. 
		 
		Her kids sifted through debris on the sidewalk, finding a clay pot and a 
		few keepsakes as they searched for Japanese wood prints they hoped to 
		recover. Her husband pulled his hand out of rubble near the 
		still-standing fireplace, holding up a piece of petrified wood handed 
		down by his grandmother. 
		
		
		  
		
		“It’s OK. It’s OK,” Berg said as much to herself as others as she took 
		stock of the destruction, remembering the deck and pool from which her 
		family watched fireworks. “It’s not like we just lost our house — 
		everybody lost their house.” 
		 
		Since the fires first began popping up around a densely populated, 
		25-mile (40-kilometer) expanse north of downtown LA, they have burned 
		more than 12,000 structures, a term that includes homes, apartment 
		buildings, businesses, outbuildings and vehicles. No cause has been 
		identified yet for the largest fires. 
		 
		Allegations of leadership failures and political blame have begun and so 
		have investigations. Gov. Gavin Newsom on Friday ordered state officials 
		to determine why a 117 million-gallon (440 million-liter) reservoir was 
		out of service and some hydrants ran dry, calling it “deeply troubling.” 
		Meanwhile, Los Angeles Fire Chief Kristin Crowley said city leadership 
		failed her department by not providing enough money for firefighting. 
		She also criticized the lack of water. 
		 
		“When a firefighter comes up to a hydrant, we expect there’s going to be 
		water,” she said. 
		 
		At least 11 people have been killed, with five from the Palisades Fire 
		and six from the Eaton Fire, according to the LA County medical 
		examiner's office. Officials said they expected that number to rise as 
		cadaver dogs go through leveled neighborhoods to assess the devastation 
		to an area larger than San Francisco. 
		 
		Officials on Friday set up a center where people could report those 
		missing. Tens of thousands of people remained under evacuation orders, 
		and the fires have consumed about 56 square miles (145 square 
		kilometers). 
		 
		The disaster took homes from everyone — from waiters to movie stars. The 
		government has not yet released figures on the cost of the damage, but 
		private firms have estimated it will climb into the tens of billions. 
		The Walt Disney Co. announced Friday it will donate $15 million to 
		respond to the fires and help rebuild. 
		 
		The flames hit schools, churches, a synagogue, libraries, boutiques, 
		bars, restaurants, banks and local landmarks like the Will Rogers’ 
		Western Ranch House and a Queen Anne-style mansion in Altadena that 
		dated back to 1887 and was commissioned for wealthy mapmaker Andrew 
		McNally. 
		
		Neighbors wandered around ruins Friday as they described now-vanished 
		bedrooms, recently remodeled kitchens and outdoor living spaces. Some 
		talked about the gorgeous views that drew them to their properties, 
		their words contrasting sharply with the scene of soot and ash. 
		 
		[to top of second column] 
			 | 
            
             
            
			  
            A statue stands amid damage from the Palisades Fire on Friday, Jan. 
			10, 2025, in Malibu, Calif. (AP Photo/Eric Thayer) 
            
			  
            In the coastal community of Pacific Palisades, Greg Benton surveyed 
			where he lived for 31 years, hoping to find his great-grandmother’s 
			wedding ring in the wreckage. 
			 
			“We just had just had Christmas morning right over here, right in 
			front of that chimney. And this is what’s left,” he said, pointing 
			to the blackened rubble that was once his living room. “It’s those 
			small family heirlooms that are the ones that really hurt the most.” 
			 
			Elsewhere in the city, people at collection sites picked through 
			cardboard boxes of donated items to restart their lives. 
			 
			Firefighters on Friday afternoon had made progress for the first 
			time on the Eaton Fire north of Pasadena, which has burned more than 
			7,000 structures. Officials said Friday most evacuation orders for 
			the area were lifted. 
			 
			LA Mayor Karen Bass, who faces a critical test of her leadership as 
			her city endures its greatest crisis in decades, said several 
			smaller fires also were stopped. 
			 
			Crews earlier Friday had been gaining ground on the Palisades Fire, 
			which burned 5,300 structures and is the most destructive in LA's 
			history. 
			 
			California National Guard troops arrived on the streets of Altadena 
			before dawn to help protect property in the fire evacuation zone, 
			and evening curfews were in effect to prevent looting after several 
			earlier arrests. 
			 
			The level of devastation is jarring even in a state that regularly 
			confronts massive wildfires. 
			 
			Anna Yeager said she and her husband agonized over going back to 
			their beloved Altadena neighborhood near Pasadena after fleeing with 
			their 6-year-old daughter and 3-year-old son, their two dogs and 
			some clothes. A neighbor told them their house was gone. 
			 
			Now she regrets not grabbing her children’s artwork, her husband’s 
			treasured cookbooks, family photos, and jewelry from her mom, who 
			died in 2012, and her husband’s grandmother, who survived Auschwitz. 
			 
			When the couple returned, they saw blocks of only “chimney after 
			chimney." 
			 
			"Power lines everywhere. Fires still going everywhere” she said, 
			adding that when they walked up to their home “it was just dust.” 
			 
			Charred grapefruits littered their yard around a blackened tree, a 
			few still hanging from its branches. 
			 
			Yeager’s neighborhood of Tudor homes was planning to celebrate its 
			100th anniversary in May. 
            
			  
			“You build a world for yourself and your family, and you feel safe 
			in that world and things like this happen that you cannot control,” 
			she said. “It’s devastating." 
			 
			There were remnants of the front porch where Yeager had photographed 
			her children nearly daily since 2020 and had planned to keep doing 
			that until they reached high school. That gave her hope. 
			 
			“The porch is still there and it’s to me, it’s a sign to rebuild and 
			not leave,” she said. “You know, it’s like saying, ‘Hey, I’m still 
			here. You can still do this.’” 
			 
			___ 
			 
			Seewer reported from Toledo, Ohio, Watson from San Diego, and 
			Hollingsworth from Mission, Kansas. Associated Press journalists 
			Eugene Garcia in Los Angeles, Olga Rodriguez in San Francisco, and 
			Hallie Golden in Seattle contributed. 
			
			All contents © copyright 2024 Associated Press. All rights reserved  |