Tools
Change country:

Former Australian child actor Rory Sykes killed in LA wildfires as author mom tried to find help when water ran out

The heartbroken mother said she attempted to move her son out of the burning building but an injury stopped her.
Read full article on: nypost.com
Power grid faults surged right before Los Angeles wildfires began: expert
A company that monitors electrical activity says faults along the Los Angeles power grid soared in the same areas where three of this week’s major wildfires are occurring.
foxnews.com
‘Wheel of Fortune’ contestant ‘still in shock’ after surprise engagement on the game show
Rhea Mathew was stunned to see her boyfriend walk on set after she solved a puzzle.
nypost.com
Star snaps of the week: Winter in NYC with Schwarzenegger and more
Arnold Schwarzenegger, Brook Shields, Elle Fanning and more.
nypost.com
The Uplift: Carter's commitment
We look back at former President Jimmy Carter's commitment to Habitat for Humanity and meet a woman who still lives in a so-called "Carter Home" in Baltimore that the late president helped build more than 30 years ago. Plus, more heartwarming news.
cbsnews.com
Biden admin slammed for ‘waiting’ to declare genocide in Sudan
The incoming Chairman of the Senate Foreign Relations Committee has blasted the Biden Admnin for waiting until just 13 days before their term ends to declare atrocities in Sudan’s war as genocide.
foxnews.com
Letters to Sports: Cori Close has built her own pyramid of success
Readers of the L.A. Times Sports section offer their opinions and thoughts on UCLA women's basketball coach Cori Close and men's coach Mick Cronin.
latimes.com
Giants legend Victor Cruz talks state of team after it retained coach, general manager despite abysmal season
The New York Giants face maybe the most important offseason in a generation, and Victor Cruz suggested what they should do in the next few months.
foxnews.com
Among the wildfires’ victims: A great-grandmother, surfer, father and son
Eleven people are confirmed dead from the two biggest wildfires devastating the Los Angeles area, and officials expect to find more victims in the days ahead.
washingtonpost.com
South Carolina’s SEC dominance facing enormous stress test
Dawn Staley’s squad is scheduled to play five ranked opponents in 15 days, starting Sunday against No. 5 Texas. 
nypost.com
Lara Trump reveals why women should trust Donald Trump — and who she thinks US’ first female president will be
"I’m excited to share something that will be very forward facing and allow me to amplify the accomplishments of the incoming Trump administration in the next couple of weeks," Lara Trump told The Post.
nypost.com
The real danger of Trump’s Greenland gambit
The air shimmers with heat as visitors look out at melting icebergs crowding the Ilulissat Icefjord on July 15, 2024, near Ilulissat, Greenland. | Sean Gallup/Getty Images It is an era of superpower conflict and competition for natural resources. Newly accessible sea routes are transforming the world’s political geography. The US government eyes a strategically located island territory, currently under the control of the Kingdom of Denmark, which Washington believes is necessary for its national security and economic interests. After first making an offer to buy the territory — one rejected by Copenhagen — the US suggests that it won’t rule out the use of military force to take it. The Danes, in response, grudgingly take the deal.  The year is 1915 and the territory in question is the Danish West Indies, known today as the US Virgin Islands. In the wake of the sinking of the passenger ship Lusitania by German submarines, President Woodrow Wilson’s administration wanted control of the Caribbean islands out of fear they could be annexed by Germany, and used as a base to attack shipping through the recently opened Panama Canal. That deal – which was finalized in 1917 for $25 million, or a bit less than $600 million in today’s money — was the last major territorial purchase by the United States. Such territorial acquisitions were a relatively common practice in the age of overseas empires, but it’s nearly unheard of today.That musty topic, though,  s unexpectedly back in the news, thanks to President-elect Donald Trump’s very public coveting of Greenland: another Danish-administered island. Trump first publicly discussed the idea of the United States purchasing the world’s largest island back in 2019, during his first term. The idea was rejected out of hand by the government of Denmark at the time, with Prime Minister Mette Frederiksen saying she “hope[s] that this is not meant seriously.” Trump canceled a visit to Denmark in response.  How serious Trump is now is known to him alone, but he has not let the idea go as he prepares to return to the White House. In December, in a social media post announcing his pick of PayPal co-founder Ken Howery to serve as ambassador to Denmark, Trump posted, “For purposes of National Security and Freedom throughout the World, the United States of America feels that the ownership and control of Greenland is an absolute necessity.” The Greenland proposal comes alongside Trump repeated is-he-joking-or-isn’t-he suggestions that Canada be made the “51st state” and demands that Panama return control of the Panama Canal — altogether, an agenda for territorial expansion on a level not seen since the James K. Polk administration in the mid-19th century. The Republican-led House Foreign Affairs Committee posted on X then deleted a post praising Trump’s plans for Greenland and Panama, writing that it’s “un-American to be afraid of big dreams.” Things got more serious on Tuesday at a press conference at Mar-a-Lago when Trump refused to rule out using “military or economic coercion” to take Greenland or the canal. (Canada, it seems, is off the hook for military force but not economic.) Also this past week, the president-elect’s son, Donald Trump Jr., visited Greenland for a brief and heavily documented stopover..  Now that the president-elect of the United States has refused to rule out military force against a NATO ally in Denmark, European leaders clearly no longer find this funny. Chancellor Olaf Scholz of Germany posted on X, “Borders must not be moved by force” — the sort of admonition usually used against Russia and China.  Even if we take Trump entirely at his word that he is serious about this and will make it a priority, the acquisition of Greenland is extremely unlikely to happen. But perhaps inadvertently, Trump has highlighted some thorny issues about geopolitics in a rapidly transforming and geopolitically important Arctic, and the suddenly contested borders of what had seemed like a settled world map.  Greenland’s political status, explained Greenland, an 836,000-square-mile island mostly covered by ice, has been under Danish rule since the 18th century, except for a period of German occupation during World War II followed by brief US protectorate. As Trump has pointed out, President Harry Truman made an offer (rebuffed by the Danes) to take permanent control of Greenland after the war.  But Greenland is also not simply property that Denmark could sell at will. In recent decades, Greenland’s population, which is nearly 90 percent Inuit, has been moving gradually toward full independence. Greenland attained home rule, including its own parliament, in 1979, and took on even greater political autonomy following a 2008 referendum.  Greenland now has its own prime minister, domestic laws, and court system. Its foreign and security policies are still dictated from Copenhagen, although Greenland is seeking more autonomy on those issues as well. In a New Year’s speech, made in the context of Trump’s remarks, Greenland Prime Minister Múte Egede suggested the time may have come to move more quickly toward independence.  The Greenland Self-Government Act, passed in 2009, stipulates that if the people of Greenland decide to move toward full independence, they will enter into negotiations with Denmark on making that happen. The push for independence has been coupled with a historical reckoning over colonial-era practices including the removal of Greenlandic children from their families to be raised by Danes. “Greenlanders are very tired of being, in a sense, treated like second-class citizens or like teenagers that are not really responsible for their actions,” said Ulrik Pram Gad, a senior researcher on Arctic issues at the Danish Institute of Security Studies.  On the other hand, there are also reasons why full independence hasn’t happened yet. For one thing, while Greenland would be one of the biggest countries in the world by land area (it’s larger than Mexico),  it would be one of the world’s smallest by population with just 57,000 people (less than the capacity of an NFL football stadium). And that population is only shrinking.  Despite some painful history, many Greenlanders also have close family and cultural ties to Denmark. The island also receives about $500 million per year in social welfare payments from the Danish state, and Greenlanders have access to free medical care and free tuition at Danish universities. (All of which is to say, Puerto Rico-like status in Trump’s America might be a tough sell for a people used to the generous Nordic welfare state.) Of course, Greenland independence could become a lot more viable if the territory, which is currently reliant mainly on fishing for income, developed more independent sources of wealth. Which is where Trump’s interest in the place comes in. Treasure beneath the ice  It’s not entirely clear when Trump decided that control of Greenland is an “absolute necessity,” for US national interests, but one theory, reported by the New York Times back in 2021, was that it came after a briefing at the White House by Greg Barnes, an Australian minerals prospector who has long touted Greenland’s mining potential. (Cosmetics heir Ronald Lauder, an old friend of Trump’s, also seems to have pushed the idea.) Greenland has substantial reserves of metals like lithium, niobium, and zirconium, which are used for producing batteries, as well as rare earth elements that are considered vital for the green energy transition, but which China currently enjoys a near monopoly over.  Greenland’s Arctic climate and geology make it a difficult place to extract these materials — there are currently only two active mines on the island — but as the ice sheet covering 80 percent of Greenland melts, the idea is that they will become more accessible. (There’s something a bit perverse about the notion of Greenland’s shrinking glaciers, which could raise global sea levels by 20 feet if they melted entirely, as a solution to climate change.) This has attracted interest and investments from a number of mining companies and governments, including China — likely another reason for Trump’s interest. These projects have also encountered local resistance: In 2021, Greenland’s parliament passed legislation banning uranium mining and halting a major rare earths mining project.  On the less climate-friendly side, the US Geological Survey has also estimated that Greenland may have as many as 31 billion barrels of oil, though no oil has actually been found despite nearly 50 years of exploration, and the government ended exploration in 2021, citing environmental concerns. In an era of rising great power tension, governments around the world are also increasingly looking at the Arctic as an area of strategic importance and competition. Part of this is the region’s potential mineral reserves. Part of it is shipping routes that have become newly navigable thanks to melting Arctic Sea ice.  Russia, which generates much of its GDP from oil and gas extracted above the Arctic circle, has taken a particular interest in the region. Under President Vladimir Putin, the Russian government has reopened 50 previously shuttered Soviet-era military bases in the area. Perhaps not coincidentally, the Arctic has seen alleged “gray zone” attacks by Russia against telecommunications infrastructure and an increasing number of close encounters by military aircraft. Geopolitical tensions in the Arctic have only grown since Russia’s 2022 invasion of Ukraine.  China, which describes itself as a “near-Arctic state” even though it is nearly a thousand miles away from the Arctic Circle at its closest point, has been increasing its economic and military assets in the region as well. Critics say the US, an Arctic power thanks to Alaska — another old territorial purchase — has been slow to respond to these developments: case in point, the US currently has only has one operational icebreaker in its fleet and likely won’t have a new one until the 2030s.  The Arctic’s geopolitical importance is also a reason why Denmark (as well as the European Union) would be reluctant to part with Greenland. Thanks to Greenland, Denmark is not only 50 times bigger than it would be otherwise, it is also the only European Union country with an Arctic coastline. (Arctic Norway is not an EU member.) This gives it a seat on the Arctic Council and a say on issues involving an increasingly contested region of the world. “There has been a kind of Greenland card, which has made Denmark more important security-wise than a standard, small European country,” Gad said.  It should be noted that none of the reasons why Greenland is strategically important for the United States explain why it needs to be part of the United States. American companies, including a new mining venture backed by Bill Gates and Jeff Bezos, are already investing in Greenland’s minerals. The US also already has a military base in the country: Pituffik Space Base, formerly known as Thule Air Base, is both the northernmost US military base in the world and a key node in America’s missile early warning system. The US benefits from Greenland being under the jurisdiction of a friendly NATO ally: In 2017, the Danish government blocked an effort by a Chinese mining company to acquire an abandoned military base in Greenland, in part out of a desire to maintain good relations with the US. These are the sort of relations that are potentially threatened by publicly musing about annexing territory by force.  Trump’s world of real estate It’s worth briefly considering just why Trump’s Greenland idea seems so bizarre. The United States acquired more than half of its current land mass by paying for it through transactions like the Louisiana Purchase, the Alaska Purchase, and the Treaty of Guadalupe Hidalgo, under which Mexico ceded the territory for much of what became the American West. It was once relatively common for countries to trade, say, the north sea island of Heligoland for the African archipelago of Zanzibar, as Britain and Germany did in 1890.  Britain acquired Bombay (now Mumbai) from Portugal as part of a wedding dowry for the marriage of a Portuguese princess to King Charles II. (Barron Trump is probably safe from being married off to a Danish princess as part of a deal, but never say never.) Borders are still sometimes redrawn by agreement these days: Tajikistan ceded some mountainous territory to China in 2011, India and Pakistan have exchanged some left over border enclaves, but they’re rare and the territories in question are usually pretty small.  The main reason why the market for national sovereignty isn’t what it used to be is probably that while much of the world’s landmass was once covered by colonial empires, it is now mostly covered by sovereign nation-states, in which citizens have some expectation of sovereignty — which includes the right to not simply be sold off to the highest bidder.  Greenland’s political status makes it something of a holdover in this regard, but that doesn’t mean its people and leaders — who’ve been steadily moving toward greater political independence — will simply acquiesce to being treated as an imperialist bargaining chip. “We are a proud Indigenous people with a right to self-determination and not some sort of good that can be traded,” Aaja Chemnitz, a member of Greenland’s parliament, told NBC News.  (Though Trump has claimed that the “people of Greenland are ‘MAGA’” and will “benefit tremendously” from US acquisition, it’s not clear if he envisions them having any say in the matter.) As for Trump’s refusal to rule out military force, wars of territorial conquest are thankfully also a lot more rare than they used to be and a lot less likely to be successful. That’s one reason why Russia’s invasion and annexation of parts of Ukraine has been such a shock to the international system.  At least since the days of Woodrow Wilson, US governments have — with some notable exceptions — had a bias toward preserving international borders rather than redrawing them. But Trump, who broke from most of the international community by recognizing Israeli sovereignty over the Golan Heights and Moroccan control of Western Sahara during his first term, clearly has a far more transactional view of borders and sovereignty than the last century of American presidents. Describing his Greenland plan, the former developer has compared it to a real estate deal: ““I look at a corner, I say, ‘I’ve got to get that store for the building that I’m building,’ etc. It’s not that different,” he told reporters interviewing him for a book at the end of his first term. The risk of treating the world map like a game of Risk, even just in rhetoric, is not merely that it strains relations with US allies. It’s that it could validate territorial claims by US enemies.  It’s hardly surprising that Russian pundits and politicians have taken a keen interest in Trump’s Greenland plans. As The Economist’s Shashank Joshi writes, “If the next US government normalises the idea of absorbing territory by force … it makes it more likely that China will believe that the US will ultimately stand aside during an invasion of Taiwan.” Back in 2014, when Russia first annexed Crimea, then Secretary of State John Kerry scoffed, “You just don’t in the 21st century behave in 19th-century fashion by invading another country on a completely trumped-up pretext.” Now, it appears, it’s the US that wants to take the world back to the age of empires. 
vox.com
Disney's Magic Kingdom honors 100-year-old WWII veteran during flag retreat ceremony
Walt Disney World honored a 100-year-old World War II veteran surrounded by loved ones in Magic Kingdom on Friday evening during a flag retreat ceremony.
foxnews.com
California Gov. Newsom orders independent investigation after hydrants run dry: ‘We need answers’
Newsom demanded an investigation into how fire hydrants ran out of water.
nypost.com
Palisades fire seen across L.A.'s San Fernando Valley; swaths of Encino, Brentwood are told to evacuate
The Palisades fire expanded Friday, and officials have ordered evacuations in swaths of Brentwood and Encino.
latimes.com
Seattle’s record-breaking minimum wage and more: Letters to the Editor — Jan. 11, 2025
Emerald pay day As usual, Seattle’s Democratic leaders have outdone themselves in mandating the minimum wage be $20.76/hour (“Seattle eateries eaten up,” Jan. 9). Yes, some people will make more money, but many more will make no money because no day-to-day business will be able to pay such a high hourly wage. Many small businesses...
1 h
nypost.com
'The View' host Sunny Hostin's surgeon husband facing years-long legal battle in fraud case
The lawsuit filed against husband of 'The View' host Sunny Hostin and more than 180 others is deeply complex, and could carry a hefty price tag for the individuals involved.
1 h
foxnews.com
Eye on America: Helping moms with postpartum depression and a generation of unpaid caregivers
We tour a Michigan facility that's treating postpartum depression with a new approach. In California, a social media influencer documents her experience as part of a growing generation of unpaid family caregivers. Watch these stories and more on "Eye on America" with host Michelle Miller.
1 h
cbsnews.com
Redacted Russiagate docs show the feds are STILL lying about Trump and their putsch attempt
A recently released doc has everything relating to the real cause of Russiagate redacted. No: The feds owe America a full accounting.
1 h
nypost.com
Some US states not running on Dunkin’ doughnuts due to temporary supply shortage
Dunkin' ran out of donuts.
1 h
nypost.com
Another parting Biden blow to American families: A war on water heaters
In a final (we hope) slam of regular Americans, Team Biden's green crusaders just targeted yet another common household appliance: gas-fired tankless water heaters.
2 h
nypost.com
D.C. United, full of more new faces, gets ready for a fresh start
As D.C. United prepares to open training camp this weekend, just four players remain from the 2023 roster.
2 h
washingtonpost.com
Letters to the Editor: Why concrete buildings might not be the answer to fire in California
With fires raging in L.A., some have asked why homes are built with wood instead of concrete. A welding inspector points out the drawbacks of such rigid structures.
2 h
latimes.com
For Angelenos suffering fire fatigue, ace water drop videos are sweet revenge
Videos of fire-fighting pilots nailing flames with miraculous precision have given Angelenos something to root for during a week of shock, terror and grief.
2 h
latimes.com
As wildfires rage, private firefighters join the fight for the fortunate few
Private firefighters hired by the government, insurance companies or individuals are among the thousands of responders battling flames across Los Angeles County.
2 h
latimes.com
Flashback: Meta’s ‘history of censorship,’ fact-checking woes under the Trump, Biden administrations
Following censorship of elected officials and pandemic opinions, experts are cautiously optimistic that Mark Zuckerberg will foster free speech within Meta.
2 h
foxnews.com
L.A. fire chief meets with mayor after saying the city failed her agency
Kristin Crowley, in multiple interviews, drew a connection between budget cuts to her department and the city’s struggle to combat the wildfires.
2 h
latimes.com
Inconvenient truths about the fires burning in Los Angeles from two fire experts
For years, renowned fire experts Jack Cohen and Stephen Pyne have tried to shift the conversation on fire prevention strategies. This week’s destruction, they say, could have been minimized.
2 h
latimes.com
Hey, Gold Rushers: Southern California found gold first! And we're still looking.
A gold rush changed California's history. That precious metal is back, striking the same reaction.
2 h
latimes.com
'They just got my uncle': Mass immigration arrests spark fear among farmworkers in Central Valley
Dozens have been arrested in the heavily agricultural Kern County during a multiple-day operation by U.S. Customs and Border Protection.
2 h
latimes.com
CWG Live updates: Cold and breezy today. Less chilly Sunday and Monday, then freezing again.
It’s a modified chilly air mass the next several days. Much colder again by Tuesday.
2 h
washingtonpost.com
What makes Terry McLaurin great? See for yourself.
The Washington Commanders’ star wide receiver is elite at ball-tracking, a skill that is difficult — but not impossible — to measure.
2 h
washingtonpost.com
For TV reporters covering fires in L.A., the tragedy gets personal
Journalists telling the fire story to the nation are keeping emotions in check as they deal with the massive losses, and requests to check if friends' homes are still standing.
2 h
latimes.com
Self-driving-car executives excited for Trump (and Musk) to take the wheel
Self-driving-car companies are excited by the prospect of Republicans using their power to help them expand from a handful of cities into communities across the country.
2 h
washingtonpost.com
Filmmaker calls out LA County's 'useless' management over wildfires that 'destroyed people's lives'
Filmmaker Justine Bateman berates California Gov. Gavin Newsom and Los Angeles Mayor Karen Bass for their "incompetence" and lack of preparation for the wildfires engulfing parts of the county.
2 h
foxnews.com
We're on fire. This is not the time for your political hot take on L.A.
Some advice from an opinion editor on L.A. fires: Maybe don't have an opinion about them just yet.
2 h
latimes.com
Altadena, ‘feral in the best possible way,’ is gone. How will it come back from fire?
The Eaton fire cut a brutal swath through Altadena and a cherished way of life in this eclectic foothill community it upended.
2 h
latimes.com
On a block in Altadena, only a few houses remain, including theirs. Should they return?
Their house survived the fires. Now the Turners, along with thousands of others, are crushed, dazed, in limbo and not sure how to proceed.
2 h
latimes.com
Paradise lost along Pacific Coast Highway
Everyone knows California is disaster-prone. But wildfires are supposed to be in the hills, not on the beach, and certainly not inside the borders of one of the biggest and best-prepared cities on the planet. That makes the Palisades fire all the more unearthly.
2 h
latimes.com
With bird flu still affecting egg prices, brunch in L.A. may soon cost more
Bird flu is causing egg prices to soar, costing restaurants more, especially those that focus on brunch. Some restaurant owners say they are already raising prices.
2 h
latimes.com
Their houses burned down. Now, they are fighting for the few homes left on the market
With thousands of people displaced from their homes, the real estate markets around Pacific Palisades and Altadena are raging, with rentals and homes attracting multiple offers.
2 h
latimes.com
4 takeaways from Newsom's budget proposal
The top things you need to know about Gov. Gavin Newsom's spending proposal for California.
2 h
latimes.com
NFL Wild Card predictions: Picks against the spread for both Saturday games
The Post's Dave Blezow returns for Season 31 of the Bettor's Guide to give his Wild Card picks for Saturday's games.
2 h
nypost.com
Wildfires impact wildlife and pets, too. Here’s how you can help them.
A family of deer gather around burned trees from the Palisades Fire on January 9, 2025. | Apu Gomes/Getty Images In just four days, blazing wildfires across Los Angeles neighborhoods have put 150,000 residents under evacuation orders, burned over 30,000 acres, destroyed more than 10,000 structures, and, as of Thursday, killed killed 10 people. Experts say it may be the costliest wildfire in US history. The fires are still ongoing, and the toll of destruction is still far from a final tally. But it’s not just human lives and homes that have been taken and are still at risk. A reporter and a photographer helped a Pasadena woman rescue her chickens from her burning home. Another journalist interviewed two residents evacuating with their horses while surrounded by flames. On social media, people have posted videos of animals like dogs and deer wandering alone amid the fires, confused and distressed.  These images and videos are just small glimpses of how the wildfires have affected the animals and wildlife who call Los Angeles their home. There aren’t exact numbers yet on the amount of animals displaced, injured, or killed, but the nonprofit Pasadena Humane has taken in more than 300 animals, from dogs and cats left behind to peacocks and baby raccoons escaping fiery areas, according to an Instagram post. Meanwhile, as Vox reporter Umair Irfan reported earlier this week, the dangers from fires in Southern California are likely about to get worse. While winds have slowed down a bit, meteorologists expect wind speeds to pick up again on Sunday and into next week, which could threaten what progress has been made to contain the fires. Climate change is exacerbating wildfire risk everywhere, and in Los Angeles, which has seen rapid swings between extremely wet and dry weather in recent years, this “weather whiplash” can increase the threat of extreme blazes.  Anywhere humans are experiencing distress from calamities, animals (both domestic and wild) are too. As these dangers grow, so will the silent suffering of animals — who have contributed nothing to the climate crisis but suffer disproportionately from it. Here’s how wildfires affect pets and wildlife alike, and how you can help.  What we know about wildfires and animals Wildfires are a natural part of California’s ecosystem, and serve key roles in maintaining the health of the surrounding environment, like by clearing decaying brush and getting nutrients back into the soil. Vegetation like chaparral, brush, and shrub are common in these ecosystems, and are highly flammable, so frequent, controlled fires can help clear these plants.  But when fires get out of hand, as they are in the Los Angeles area, they can endanger lives, homes, and displace thousands of people and animals. For families rushing to evacuate safely, their pets may get lost or left behind in the mayhem. Those who have larger animals, like goats and horses, may not have the ability to relocate their animals to safety on short notice.  Pet displacement is an unfortunate consequence of natural disasters and emergencies. One survey by the American Society for Prevention of Cruelty to Animals found that nearly half of pet owners have left behind an animal while evacuating an emergency. Even if someone is able to bring along their pets, if they have lost everything in a fire, they may have to surrender their pets to animal shelters because they no longer have the means to care for them. Right now, local Los Angeles shelters are receiving an influx of animals in their facilities.  Even for pets who aren’t directly in the fire’s path, lingering smoke can harm animals just as it harms humans. According to the American Veterinary Medical Association, wildfire smoke can cause animals to cough, gag, and have difficulty breathing.  As for wildlife, we’re still learning a lot about how individual species and larger ecosystems respond to fires, especially how these animals actively respond and are harmed by blazes. Morgan Tingley, an ecology and evolutionary biology professor at the University of California Los Angeles (UCLA), told Vox that there aren’t exact numbers on the amount of wildlife that are killed by wildfires, but that in some cases, it’s probably a lot. “The scientific study of what animals do during fire is stunningly behind,” Tingley said. He added that we know more about the responses and deaths of larger animals, like bobcats and coyotes, than of smaller creatures like songbirds or mice. Some of this research relies on surveys and citizen scientists to report carcasses or animal sightings; Tingley himself is part of an ongoing citizen science study called Project Phoenix that records how wildfire smoke affects birds. Just this week, Tingley says he noticed bird species like yellow-rumped warblers flying away from the fire. One review of the effects of wildfire smoke on wildlife found that smoke inhalation contributed to adverse consequences like neurological impairment and carbon monoxide poisoning. A study by UCLA and the National Parks Service found that the 2018 Woolsey Fire in the Santa Monica Mountains prompted mountain lions to take greater and often deadly risks to try to survive. The wildfire burned nearly 100,000 acres, including half of the mountain lion population’s available habitat. Loss of vegetation removed hiding spots for mountain lions to hunt, and researchers found that these animals nearly completely avoided their former habitat after it had been burnt. Seeking out a new home, one mountain lion crossed a busy freeway, and was later struck and killed. Another mountain lion crossed a freeway safely, but later died of starvation. Part of our lack of knowledge is because humans have actively repressed fires for a century — a strategy that can be traced back to the early 20th century when a mega wildfire burned 3 million acres across Montana and Idaho. “We have very little reference for what these animals are going through and how to deal with these kinds of landscape changes,” Gavin Jones, a research ecologist at the US Forest Service, told Vox in 2023. “In this new era of rapidly changing fire regimes, we don’t have a great roadmap for how to conserve wildlife.” Animals and their environments can be resilient. “These ecosystems, in general, have co-evolved with fire for millions of years,” Tingley said. “The native plants are adapted to relatively frequent fire scenarios, and the animals are too.” But he also acknowledged that megafires like this one are different, and are causing less healthy regeneration — a crucial part of any kind of recovery.  Adaptation takes a long time, and it’s not a guaranteed (or timely) solution. The good news is that there are ways humans can help now. How to give and get help to animals in Los Angeles Multiple local organizations are quickly working to rescue animals from imminent danger and treat their injuries. Here’s how you can help these groups. If you’re in the Los Angeles area, and if it’s safe to do so, consider helping these shelters by fostering. Pasadena Humane has received enough physical donations (like food) and are now asking for monetary donations to get the animals in their care the resources they need. The Little Lion Foundation, a Long Beach-based nonprofit focused on caring for cats, is open to providing space, supplies, and medical care for injured cats. The Los Angeles Animal Services is directing people with small animals under evacuation orders to the Westwood Recreation Center and the Ritchie Valens Recreation Center if they need a place to stay. For people with large animals like horses, they recommend the Los Angeles Equestrian Center and the Hansen Dam Recreation Area. Tingley also gave some advice for people who may come across wildlife. Report injured animals that you see to wildlife rehabilitation centers and on apps like Animal Help Now, keep water available for displaced wildlife passing by, and keep pets indoors so that they don’t interact with predators like bobcats and mountain lions. Supporting conservation groups that work to protect wildlife is also an option. Save LA Cougars, an initiative that’s part of the National Wildlife Federation, has a strong track record: They successfully advocated for a wildlife crossing for LA’s Highway 101. That crossing is slated to open in 2026. It’s likely we will never know the exact loss of animal life in these wildfires — but the residents, researchers, and volunteers of Los Angeles are doing what they can to preserve the lives of their domesticated companions and wildlife neighbors. “Angelenos love our natural beauty, and I think in many cases, actually love the great abundance of wildlife that are at our doorsteps,” Tingley said.
2 h
vox.com
Slate Mini Crossword for Jan. 11, 2025
Take a quick break with our daily 5x5 grid.
2 h
slate.com
If You Were in L.A., How Would You Feel About Your Elected Officials Right Now?
Fair or not, you can’t really blame anyone for this reaction.
2 h
slate.com
Buy Nothing Groups Seem to Offer Everything—Except a Chance to Get to Know Your Neighbors
The local online parent group, where I’d hoped to find new friends, was basically a random yard sale.
2 h
slate.com
The Complications Are Spreading Like Wildfire
It’s not just their reputations at stake; it’s their livelihoods.
2 h
slate.com
Suspects cut fence at California Army Reserve Center before stealing Humvees, equipment
Police said unknown suspects stole three Humvees and other military equipment from an Army Reserve Center in Tustin, California, earlier this week.
2 h
foxnews.com