Many domestic workers now face a dire financial hardship because of their employment in areas where structures burned down.
Let’s assume that a house destroyed by the fires had a $1-million market value and a $600,000 taxable value this year.
No stranger to natural disasters, Pasadena resident Pedro Rojas keeps a safety bag in his car with essentials like a jacket, ...
What happens to security deposits? Who pays for repairs? LAist answers these and other questions from tenants affected by the ...
Danielle Stone, 37, lived with her husband, Bryan Davila, and their daughter Melina in Altadena, Los Angeles County. Their ...
Fueled by powerful winds and dry conditions, a series of ferocious wildfires erupted last week and roared across the Los ...
The wildfires have destroyed more than 12,000 structures, and a Southern California housing shortage that was already serious ...
It’s too soon to know how the region — and the industry — might recover. But nothing will be as it was, and solidarity is the ...
Former Oakland Mayor Sheng Thao, her boyfriend and a father-son team who run the local recycling company were indicted Friday ...
I have friends who lost houses. I have family who were burned out of their home. Los Angeles has lost churches, synagogues, ...
Corruption is ingrained in Los Angeles,” said Jamie Court, president of Consumer Watchdog, a non-profit public interest group ...