SCE's attorneys say the company has preserved evidence in the area where the fire originated as its crews work to restore power to about 2,000 homes in Altadena that are still dark.
More than 20 lawsuits have already been filed against the utility provider. Southern California Edison vowed to remain 'transparent' through the process.
Now, attorneys for Altadena resident Evangeline Iglesias ... In a filing to the California Public Utilities Commission, Edison reported two days after the fire started that it had not received ...
In the wake of a spate of fires at battery storage facilities across the state, the California Public Utilities Commission will soon vote on establishing new standards for maintaining and operating them. If passed, the proposal also increases oversight for emergency response at energy storage sites that use batteries.
Southern California Edison has reported a Jan. 7 fault on a power line that was connected miles away from the lines located near the origin of the deadly Eaton Fire that sparked that day
The Eaton Fire started at about 6:18 p.m. near Altadena Drive and Midwick ... In a new regulatory filing with California Public Utilities Commission, Southern California Edison said it is aware ...
The California Public Utilities Commission approved Southern California ... and south of Mulholland Drive For the Eaton fire, Altadena residents who live along Canyon Crest Road into the Meadows ...
In a Monday letter addressed to the California Public Utilities Commission, Paul Pimentel with ... as “the start of the Eaton Fire.” Altadena residents Jennifer and Marcus Errico captured ...
That is a terrible idea, full stop. Lawmakers shouldn’t use the fires as an excuse to slow down on clean energy — not when scientists say humanity must slash emissions much faster to keep the climate crisis from getting worse, and not when the climate crisis is a significant reason we’re seeing these catastrophic fires in the first place.
On the night the deadly Eaton Fire broke out in Los Angeles County, a gas station video camera captured what appeared to be sparks on a steep flank of Mount Wilson on Altadena’s outskirts and then flames spreading across the hillside.
As the cleanup phase of recovery begins after the devastating fires in L.A. County, displaced residents grapple with new uncertainty surrounding the cost and timeline for rebuilding.