An executive order signed by President Trump in late January called for the EPA to expedite its removal of hazardous materials from the Los Angeles area wildfire zones.
The Environmental Protection Agency Administrator Lee Zeldin, President Trump’s envoy for special missions Richard Grenell, ...
Welcome to Bloomberg’s California Edition—covering all the events shaping one of the world’s biggest economies and its global ...
The parking lot at Will Rogers State Beach will serve as a temporary site before damaged household hazardous materials like ...
A modest but motivated crowd gathered by Topanga Beach on Friday afternoon to protest the decision to place a sorting site ...
Federal and local agencies tasked with fire cleanup said on Wednesday that they are expecting to haul away over four million ...
USC researchers traveled through neighborhoods devastated by the Eaton Fire to run lead tests on ash gathered from gutters and sand pulled from playgrounds. What they found: They found a whole lot of ...
There is at one slight glimmer of hope, however. According to Moe, testing following the devastating fires in Lahaina, Maui, ...
The Environment Protection Agency released an updated list of considerations to keep residents of the Pacific Palisades and ...
The EPA will use the state beach parking lot as a base for its massive effort to clean up hazardous materials after the ...
The January wildfires in Los Angeles County generated 4.5 million tons of waste, or nearly half of the county's typical ...