A new UCLA study found that the Eaton fire disproportionally impacted Altadena’s Black community and that systemic inequality and redlining contributed to fire vulnerability. The study ...
Craft a great last-minute schedule with our Weekend Guide to L.A. This weekend, Black History Month kicks off with some wonderful events and there's a slew of fundraisers for fire victims ...
Data from the study indicates that over 60% of Black households in Altadena were located within the Eaton Fire perimeter, and nearly half of them were destroyed or severely damaged. Comparatively ...
A study published Tuesday by UCLA researchers indicates the Eaton Fire disproportionately affected Black residents in Altadena. The research comes from a new data brief from the UCLA Ralph J. Bunche ...
Or at least they did until the fire. The five-acre green space, named after Charles White, a local Black artist, was also scorched by the flames. Author Octavia Butler – best known for penning ...
Image Victor Shaw, a former courier, was killed in the fire. Altadena was overwhelmingly white in the 1950s, at the beginning of the Civil Rights Movement. When Black residents slowly began to ...
Texture of steam, fog, clouds, smoke. Vector black and white smoke stock illustrations Translucent smoke isolated on a transparent background. Steam... smouldering kiss Boy, this couple have been hard ...
NIghtwing and Red Hood have always had a rivalry, but after one particularly nasty fight, Nightwing crossed the line with one sentence that's absolutely unforgivable. During one of Jason's lowest ...
The community is also home to hundreds of Black families, whose homes were ravaged by the Eaton Fire one week ago. "You've got three generations," said Altadena resident Pauline Daniels.