About 35,000 homes and businesses without electricity in Los Angeles – data
34,646 homes and businesses in Los Angeles are now without electricity, according to Poweroutage.us, an outage monitor that tracks blackouts across the US.
Roughly 18,400 Southern California Edison customers remain without power, as well as about 16,100 Los Angeles Department of Water & Power customers, and about 100 with Pasadena Water and Power, according to the latest data.
Here is the latest data showing the number of people without power in some of the other areas of California:
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San Bernardino: 8,333
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Riverside: 7, 152
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Santa Barbara: 2,081
In an update posted to X a few hours ago, the LA Department of Water & Power said since the fires started on Tuesday they have restored power to over 355,000 customers.
Key events
Here’s new aerial footage of the California wildfires spreading:
Current state of Los Angeles wildfires
This is the current state of the Los Angeles wildfires as of Sunday morning, according to CalFire:
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Palisades: Burned 23,707 acres, 11% contained
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Eaton: Burned 14,117 acres, 15% contained
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Kenneth: Burned 1,052 acres, 100% contained
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Hurst: Burned 799 acres, 76% contained
Summary of the day so far…
It has just gone past 7am in Los Angeles, where firefighters are continuing to battle three fires – Palisades, Eaton and Hurst – that are ravaging the city. Here is the latest on the LA fires:
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At least 16 people have been killed so far in the California fires, with 11 attributed to the Eaton Fire and five to the Palisades, while 13 other residents remain missing.
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Authorities issued new evacuation orders for eastern communities threatened by the Palisades fire late last night, including parts of the affluent Brentwood area.
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More than 100,000 people are under evacuation orders. There are reports of California residents who have lost their homes struggling to find new places to live because some landlords and businesses are illegally raising prices to a very high level.
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Tens of thousands of homes and businesses in Los Angeles are still without electricity.
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At least 20 arrests have been made for looting. Among them were two looters who posed as firefighters when entering houses, according to the police.
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Officials have imposed a mandatory curfew in evacuation zones as well as in the city of Santa Monica, which is next to Pacific Palisades.
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California’s governor, Gavin Newsom, has doubled the deployment of the state’s national guard to Los Angeles amid the wildfires.
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The cause of the fires, which started on Tuesday, has yet to be determined.
Crews from California and nine other states are part of the ongoing response to the fires that includes 1,354 fire engines, 84 aircraft and more than 14,000 personnel, Michael Traum, of the California office of emergency services, has said.
As well as neighbouring countries Canada and Mexico, Texas, New Mexico, Colorado, Utah, Nevada, Arizona, Oregon and Washington have all sent firefighters to Los Angeles as part of the emergency relief effort.
The National Weather Service has warned that strong Santa Ana winds could soon return. These winds have been largely blamed for turning wildfires into the infernos that have wreaked so much destruction across large swathes of California.
Here are some of the latest images being sent to us over the newswires from Los Angeles, where four fires continue to rage:
What do we know about the LA fires victims?
The Eaton fire, in the north of the city around Pasadena, covering 14,117 acres, has killed 11 people, including: Victor Shaw, 66, Anthony Mitchell, 67, who was an amputee, and his son Justin, who had cerebral palsy and was in his early 20s, Rodney Nickerson, 82, and Erliene Kelley, a retired pharmacy technician in Altadena who lived very close to Shaw and Nickerson. The Eaton Fire is the second largest and is estimated to be about 15% contained. You can read more about the people who have died since the wildfires started on Tuesday here.
The Palisades fire, which is roughly 11% contained and covers 23,654 acres, has killed five people, reportedly including Randall Miod, 55, a long-time Malibu resident who died in his home, according to his mother, Australian former child actor Rory Sykes, 32, who died after his mother was unable to evacuate him, and Annette Rossilli, 85, who reportedly refused to evacuate her Pacific Palisades home after she was told to after the start of the Palisades fire. 13 other people remain missing.
As we have been reporting (see post at 09.37), US president-elect, Donald Trump, has criticised California governor Gavin Newsom’s forest management policies and falsely claimed the state’s fish conservation efforts are responsible for fire hydrants running dry in urban areas. He has called for the Democratic governor to resign.
In 2019, during his first term as president, Trump criticised Newsom’s forest management that he said had contributed to devastating fires. Last week, he criticised the state’s water management policies in social media posts the governor and other officials dismissed as false or misleading.
“One of the best and most beautiful parts of the United States of America is burning down to the ground,” Trump wrote on his Truth Social platform. Posting on Truth Social six hours ago, he wrote:
The fires are still raging in LA. The incompetent pols have no idea how to put them out. Thousands of magnificent houses are gone, and many more will soon be lost. There is death all over the place. This is one of the worst catastrophes in the history of our Country. They just can’t put out the fires. What’s wrong with them?
Trump, who has dismissed the climate crisis, has promised to drill for more oil and cut back on renewable energy when he returns to the White House later this month.
A video shows a fire tornado spotted in the Palisades blaze:
At least two looters were posed as firefighters as they entered homes, police say
As is noted in our news report on the California wildfires, at least 20 arrests have been made for looting. Officials have imposed a mandatory curfew in evacuation zones as well as in the city of Santa Monica, which is next to Pacific Palisades.
“Looting is an issue, the number of arrests is continuously growing,” Capt Mike Lorenz of the Los Angeles Police Department said yesterday.
“We even made arrests of two individuals that were actually posing as firefighters coming in and out of houses,” he added.
LA County Sheriff Roger Luna has said looting was “unacceptable” and hoped having soldiers – deployed in LA to crack down on looting in neighbourhoods emptied by wildfire evacuation orders – would “help send a stronger message”.
Here is video of Los Angeles residents returning to their homes to assess the damaged left by the devastating fires which raged through multiple areas of the city:
About 35,000 homes and businesses without electricity in Los Angeles – data
34,646 homes and businesses in Los Angeles are now without electricity, according to Poweroutage.us, an outage monitor that tracks blackouts across the US.
Roughly 18,400 Southern California Edison customers remain without power, as well as about 16,100 Los Angeles Department of Water & Power customers, and about 100 with Pasadena Water and Power, according to the latest data.
Here is the latest data showing the number of people without power in some of the other areas of California:
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San Bernardino: 8,333
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Riverside: 7, 152
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Santa Barbara: 2,081
In an update posted to X a few hours ago, the LA Department of Water & Power said since the fires started on Tuesday they have restored power to over 355,000 customers.
It’s around 2am in Los Angeles, where firefighters are continuing to battle the four fires that are ravaging the city. Sky News gave this update on these fires about an hour ago:
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Palisades: At least 23,654 acres, 11% contained
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Eaton: At least 14,117 acres, 15% contained
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Kenneth: At least 1,052 acres, 90% contained
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Hurst: At least 799 acres, 76% contained
Los Angeles county board of supervisors chair Kathryn Barger has invited US president-elect, Donald Trump, who will be inaugurated on 20 January, to visit the region and see the devastation caused by the fires first-hand. Barger said Trump’s visit would provide hope to the local community suffering from the wildfire’s damage.
“By accepting this invitation, Mr President-elect, you will join us in supporting our citizenry and thanking our heroic first responders, who have risked their own lives to save others,” Barger wrote in the letter, which has been posted on X.
“We would also ask you, as our president, to stand with the people of Los Angeles County as we set our course to rebuild. Your presence would be deeply felt and appreciated.”
Outgoing US President Joe Biden has already approved a disaster declaration for the southern California fires, committing the federal government to covering all of the fire management and debris removal costs for six months.
In a social media post on Wednesday, Trump said California governor Gavin Newsom, who is a Democrat, had “refused to sign the water restoration declaration put before him that would have allowed millions of gallons of water” to put out the fires. Trump has called for the California governor to resign over the fires. The governor’s press office issued a statement in response, saying: “There is no such document as the water restoration declaration – that is pure fiction.”
Price gouging preventing displaced Californians from finding new places to live
California attorney general Rob Bonta has warned that it is illegal to engage in price gouging, looting or scamming of any kind and those who do in response to the fires will be held accountable by the law.
“We’ve seen businesses and landlords … jack up the price,” he told journalists at a press conference yesterday. “It’s called price gouging. It is illegal. You cannot do it. It is a crime punishable by up to a year in jail and fines.”
Prices should only be increasing 10% or less from before the fire, Bonta was quoted as having said. He said that “this is California law and it’s in place to protect those suffering from a tragedy”.
The comments come amid reports of California residents who have lost their homes to the fire struggling to find new places to live due to price gouging – where companies or an individual excessively raise prices during emergencies.
“We put in an application at a house … that was listed at $17,000 a month, and they told us if we didn’t pay $30,000, we weren’t going to get it. They told me they have people ready to offer more and pay cash. It’s absolutely insane,” Maya Lieberman, a 50-year-old stylist, who is unable to find anywhere to live, told the Agence France-Presse (AFP) news agency.
Here are some of the latest images being sent to us over the newswires from California:
A preliminary estimate by AccuWeather put the damage and economic losses so far of the LA fires – that have already destroyed at least 12,000 structures – at between $135bn (£111bn) and $150bn (£123bn).
LA fires death toll rises to 16 as new evacuation orders are issued
Hello and welcome to our live coverage of the Los Angeles wildfires that have destroyed 12,000 structures and killed 16 people.
Five of the deaths were attributed to the Palisades fire and 11 resulted from the Eaton fire, the coroner’s office said on Saturday evening.
The Los Angeles county sheriff, Robert Luna, said the death toll is expected to rise as authorities deploy search dogs to devastated areas. The sheriff also said 13 people are reported missing.
County supervisor Lindsey Horvath said the LA area “had another night of unimaginable terror and heartbreak, and even more Angelenos evacuated due to the north-east expansion of the Palisades fire”.
The CalFire operations chief, Christian Litz, said the main focus on Saturday would be the Palisades fire burning in the canyon area, not far from the UCLA campus and the J Paul Getty Museum. Over the past 24 hours, the Palisades fire spread over an additional 1,000 acres (400 hectares), consuming more homes.
A fierce battle against the flames was under way in Mandeville Canyon, home to Arnold Schwarzenegger and other celebrities not far from the Pacific coast, where swooping helicopters dumped water as the blaze charged downhill.
The National Weather Service warned of worsening Santa Ana winds that it predicted would pick up on Saturday night into Sunday morning in Los Angeles and Ventura counties, and again on late Monday through Tuesday morning, bringing sustained winds of up to 30mph and wind gusts up to 70mph.
The fire also was threatening to jump over Interstate 405 and into densely populated areas in the Hollywood Hills and San Fernando Valley.
In other developments:
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In response to criticism over water supply issues, the LA Department of Public Works released a statement “correcting misinformation” about the lack of water to fight the Palisades fire this week. The statement was released one day after the chief of the LA fire department, Kristin Crowley, told Fox LA that her firefighters had been hamstrung when hydrants ran dry in certain parts of the Palisades on Wednesday morning.
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Malibu has lost one-third of the eastern edge of the city, mayor Doug Stewart said yesterday evening. He said that Malibu, a community of about 10,000 people on the western edge of Los Angeles, has suffered three fires in three months, with the Palisades fire, which threatens to spread west of interstate 405, being the worst.
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Firefighters deployed from Mexico arrived in Los Angeles on Saturday afternoon. Canadian and Texan firefighters are also on their way to California.
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Authorities issued new evacuation orders for eastern communities threatened by the Palisades fire late last night, including parts of the affluent Brentwood area.
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California’s governor, Gavin Newsom, has doubled the deployment of the state’s national guard to Los Angeles amid the wildfires.
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Newsom has also launched a website aimed at addressing misinformation about the Los Angeles area wildfires. CaliforniaFireFacts.com, a branch of Newsom’s own website, includes information about water availability, forest land management and LA’s fire department budget.
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The Southern California Edison CEO, Steven Powell, has told reporters there are now about 50,000 customers without power, “down from over half a million just a couple days ago”. Powell said there was no evidence that any of Edison’s equipment caused the Hurst fire but that the investigation was continuing.