As recovery efforts continue in Los Angeles, a looming question remains – where will all the toxic waste go? Lario Park, ...
In west Altadena, you have the ‘little park’ and the ‘little library.’” Or at least they did until the fire. The five-acre green space, named after Charles White, a local Black artist ...
The Altadena Golf Course will soon be the latest site to be used by the Environmental Protection Agency as a staging area for the collection household hazardous materials as part of phase one of a two ...
One subcontractor has been fined repeatedly by the EPA and the state in recent years for improper handling of hazardous ...
According to a UCLA study, Black residents in Altadena were more likely to have their homes damaged or destroyed by the Eaton ...
For a particular creative community, Altadena represented one of the last great affordable places in L.A. to raise a family.
The EPA is conducting its largest wildfire hazardous waste cleanup operation to date. The Federal Emergency Management Agency ...
Santa Rosa’s Coffey Park was destroyed by a fire in 2017—but mostly recovered. It could be a model for Altadena and Pacific ...
This site is the second created by the agency to stage household hazardous waste from the Eaton fire. The first site, Lario ...
Disneyland and Universal Studios Hollywood are offering free theme park tickets to first responders who tackled the ...
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Pasadena Star-News on MSNWhat will happen to our trees, Altadena worries, as debris cleanup ramps upAltadena residents and arborists are sounding the alarm about protecting the town’s trees as crews get set to begin phase two of debris removal.
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