Staff report – Orange County Register https://www.ocregister.com Get Orange County and California news from Orange County Register Sat, 19 Jul 2025 13:45:00 +0000 en-US hourly 30 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.8.2 https://www.ocregister.com/wp-content/uploads/2017/04/cropped-ocr_icon11.jpg?w=32 Staff report – Orange County Register https://www.ocregister.com 32 32 126836891 Del Mar horse racing consensus picks for Saturday, July 19, 2025 https://www.ocregister.com/2025/07/19/del-mar-horse-racing-consensus-picks-for-saturday-july-19-2025/ Sat, 19 Jul 2025 13:47:45 +0000 https://www.ocregister.com/?p=11051941&preview=true&preview_id=11051941 The consensus box of Del Mar horse racing picks comes from handicappers Bob Mieszerski, Eddie Wilson, Kevin Modesti and Mark Ratzky. Here are the picks for thoroughbred races on Saturday, July 19, 2025.

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11051941 2025-07-19T06:47:45+00:00 2025-07-19T06:45:00+00:00
Del Mar horse racing consensus picks for Friday, July 18, 2025 https://www.ocregister.com/2025/07/17/del-mar-horse-racing-consensus-picks-for-friday-july-18-2025/ Fri, 18 Jul 2025 00:48:12 +0000 https://www.ocregister.com/?p=11049118&preview=true&preview_id=11049118 The consensus box of Del Mar horse racing picks comes from handicappers Bob Mieszerski, Eddie Wilson, Kevin Modesti and Mark Ratzky. Here are the picks for thoroughbred races for opening day on Friday, July 18, 2025.

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11049118 2025-07-17T17:48:12+00:00 2025-07-17T17:45:00+00:00
Trump administration says it is ending deployment of 2,000 National Guard troops in LA https://www.ocregister.com/2025/07/15/trump-administration-says-it-is-ending-deployment-of-2000-national-guard-troops-in-la/ Wed, 16 Jul 2025 02:10:39 +0000 https://www.ocregister.com/?p=11045435&preview=true&preview_id=11045435 Half of the California National Guard troops who were federalized and deployed to Los Angeles in response to unrest sparked by immigration-enforcement raids in the area will return to their normal duties, the Pentagon announced on Tuesday.

Gov. Gavin Newsom and Southern California leaders, including Los Angeles Mayor Karen Bass and Orange County Rep. Lou Correa, responded quickly to the announcement from the Pentagon that 2,000 federalized California National Guard troops were being released from their federal assignments.

Newsom, for example, said Trump “has been exploiting” the National Guard for more than a month “as his political pawns.”

“Thousands of members are still federalized in Los Angeles for no reason and unable to carry out their critical duties across the state,” Newsom said. “End this theater and send everyone home.”

Trump’s action, Bass said, “happened because the people of Los Angeles stood united and stood strong. We organized peaceful protests, we came together at rallies, we took the Trump administration to court — all of this led to today’s retreat.

“My message today to Angelenos is clear,” she added. “I will never stop fighting for this city. We will not stop making our voices heard until this ends, not just here in L.A., but throughout our country.”

Bass was scheduled to hold a news conference Tuesday evening to more fully respond to the Pentagon’s announcement.

In early June, President Donald Trump deployed about 4,000 California National Guard troops and 700 active duty Marines to respond to a series of protests against immigration raids in and around Los Angeles. Trump ordered that 2,000 California National Guard troops be brought under federal control and deployed to Los Angeles to protect federal facilities and personnel in light of protests that erupted mainly in the downtown area. Another 2,000 troops were later added to that deployment, along with 700 U.S. Marines.

Immigration enforcement activities in early June across Los Angeles and Orange counties sparked protests and heightened fear among many immigrant families. On June 7, hundreds of protesters gathered outside the federal building in downtown Los Angeles and marched through the area to denounce the Immigration and Customs Enforcement raids in Los Angeles.

“The days of chaos ruling the streets are over,” FBI Deputy Director Dan Bongino said that day. “Either obey the law, or go to jail, there’s no third option.”

By July 7, federal officers on horseback cruised a mostly empty MacArthur Park near downtown. Defense officials had said about 90 California National Guard members would be there in addition to more than a dozen military vehicles to help protect immigration officers during their raid at the park.

City officials said they didn’t believe there were any arrests at the park. The Department of Homeland Security wouldn’t say whether anyone had been arrested or what the operation was about.

Correa, for his part, welcomed the news Tuesday but said he also hopes to see troops be taken out of Santa Ana.

Given all the ICE activity in the area, the Santa Ana Democrat said, the area “is as boring as it comes.”

The presence of the National Guard is negatively impacting the community, citizens and non-citizens alike, Correa said.

“It’s an occupational force,” he said. “It’s not only people without documents. It’s also U.S.-born citizens who have gotten apprehended by ICE.

“This is unacceptable,” Correa added. “We’re not a communist regime; we’re not a dictatorial nation where you control us. We have freedoms.”

The National Guard’s deployment to L.A., Newsom said, had pulled troops away from their families and civilian work “to serve as political pawns for the President in Los Angeles.”

“While nearly 2,000 of them are starting to demobilize,” the governor added, “the remaining guardsmembers continue without a mission, without direction and without any hopes of returning to help their communities.”

Trump, though, has contended that “there has been an invasion” of migrants entering the country without legal permission.

But that wasn’t the assessment of the chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, Gen. Dan Caine.

“I don’t see any foreign, state-sponsored folks invading,” he said to lawmakers at the time, “but I’ll be mindful of the fact that there have been some border issues.”

Local officials contested the deployment in multiple ways, including in court.

U.S. District Judge Charles Breyer, in fact, found Trump acted illegally when he activated the soldiers over opposition from Newsom. But an appeals court allowed the president to retain control of National Guard troops he sent to Los Angeles in response to protests over immigration raids.

In a unanimous, 38-page ruling, a three-judge panel of the 9th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals ruled that conditions in the L.A. area were sufficient for the president to deploy the troops.

“Affording appropriate deference to the President’s determination,” read the unsigned opinion, “we conclude that he likely acted within his authority in federalizing the National Guard.”

The three-judge panel included two Trump appointees and one of former President Joe Biden.

Reporters Kaitlyn Schallhorn and Teresa Liu provided content for this story.

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11045435 2025-07-15T19:10:39+00:00 2025-07-15T19:10:50+00:00
This week’s bestsellers at Southern California’s independent bookstores https://www.ocregister.com/2025/07/15/this-weeks-bestsellers-at-southern-californias-independent-bookstores-186/ Wed, 16 Jul 2025 01:20:31 +0000 https://www.ocregister.com/?p=11045035&preview=true&preview_id=11045035 The SoCal Indie Bestsellers List for the sales week ended July 13 is based on reporting from the independent booksellers of Southern California, the California Independent Booksellers Alliance and IndieBound. For an independent bookstore near you, visit IndieBound.org.

HARDCOVER FICTION

1. Atmosphere: Taylor Jenkins Reid

2. Vera, or Faith: Gary Shteyngart

3. The Emperor of Gladness: Ocean Vuong

4. My Friends: Fredrik Backman

5. James: Percival Everett

6. Bury Our Bones in the Midnight Soil: V. E. Schwab

7. Culpability: Bruce Holsinger

8. My Name Is Emilia del Valle: Isabel Allende

9. The Irresistible Urge to Fall for Your Enemy: Brigitte Knightley

10. The Wedding People: Alison Espach

HARDCOVER NONFICTION

1. The Let Them Theory: A Life-Changing Tool That Millions of People Can’t Stop Talking About: Mel Robbins, Sawyer Robbins

2. Abundance: Ezra Klein, Derek Thompson

3. The Creative Act: A Way of Being: Rick Rubin

4. A Marriage at Sea: A True Story of Love, Obsession, and Shipwreck: Sophie Elmhirst

5. Lessons from Cats for Surviving Fascism: Stewart Reynolds

6. 2024: How Trump Retook the White House and the Democrats Lost America: Josh Dawsey, Tyler Pager, Isaac Arnsdorf

7. Super Agers: An Evidence-Based Approach to Longevity: Eric Topol

8. The Book of Alchemy: A Creative Practice for an Inspired Life: Suleika Jaouad

9. We Can Do Hard Things: Answers to Life’s 20 Questions: Glennon Doyle, Abby Wambach, Amanda Doyle

10. The Serviceberry: Abundance and Reciprocity in the Natural World: Robin Wall Kimmerer, John Burgoyne (Illus.)

MASS MARKET

1. 1984: George Orwell

2. Animal Farm: George Orwell

3. Jurassic Park: Michael Crichton

4. The Catcher in the Rye: J.D. Salinger

5. Lord of the Flies: William Golding

6. The Diary of a Young Girl: Anne Frank

7. The Picture of Dorian Gray and Three Stories: Oscar Wilde

8. Women Who Run With the Wolves: Clarissa Pinkola Estes

9. Foundation: Isaac Asimov

10. Slaughterhouse-Five: Kurt Vonnegut

TRADE PAPERBACK FICTION

1. Remarkably Bright Creatures: Shelby Van Pelt

2. Project Hail Mary: Andy Weir

3. Martyr!: Kaveh Akbar

4. All Fours: Miranda July

5. I Who Have Never Known Men: Jacqueline Harpman

6. The Ministry of Time: Kaliane Bradley

7. Creation Lake: Rachel Kushner

8. One Golden Summer: Carley Fortune

9. Demon Copperhead: Barbara Kingsolver

10. Problematic Summer Romance: Ali Hazelwood

 

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11045035 2025-07-15T18:20:31+00:00 2025-07-15T18:21:00+00:00
This week’s bestsellers at Southern California’s independent bookstores https://www.ocregister.com/2025/07/08/this-weeks-bestsellers-at-southern-californias-independent-bookstores-185/ Wed, 09 Jul 2025 01:29:22 +0000 https://www.ocregister.com/?p=11037602&preview=true&preview_id=11037602 The SoCal Indie Bestsellers List for the sales week ended July 6 is based on reporting from the independent booksellers of Southern California, the California Independent Booksellers Alliance and IndieBound. For an independent bookstore near you, visit IndieBound.org.

HARDCOVER FICTION

1. Atmosphere: Taylor Jenkins Reid

2. The Emperor of Gladness: Ocean Vuong

3. Great Big Beautiful Life: Emily Henry

4. James: Percival Everett

5. Bury Our Bones in the Midnight Soil: V. E. Schwab

6. The River Is Waiting: Wally Lamb

7. So Far Gone: Jess Walter

8. My Friends: Fredrik Backman

9. My Name Is Emilia del Valle: Isabel Allende

10. Don’t Let Him In: Lisa Jewell

HARDCOVER NONFICTION

1. The Let Them Theory: A Life-Changing Tool That Millions of People Can’t Stop Talking About: Mel Robbins, Sawyer Robbins

2. Abundance: Ezra Klein, Derek Thompson

3. Wealthy and Well-Known: Build Your Personal Brand and Turn Your Reputation into Revenue: Rory Vaden, AJ Vaden

4. Lessons from Cats for Surviving Fascism: Stewart Reynolds

5. Mark Twain: Ron Chernow

6. Notes to John: Joan Didion

7. Everything Is Tuberculosis: The History and Persistence of Our Deadliest Infection: John Green

8. One Day, Everyone Will Have Always Been Against This: Omar El Akkad

9. The Creative Act: A Way of Being: Rick Rubin

10. Actress of a Certain Age: My Twenty-Year Trail to Overnight Success: Jeff Hiller

MASS MARKET

1. 1984: George Orwell

2. Animal Farm: George Orwell

3. The Way of Kings: Brandon Sanderson

4. Jurassic Park: Michael Crichton

5. The Name of the Wind: Patrick Rothfuss

6. Foundation: Isaac Asimov

7. The Diary of a Young Girl: Anne Frank

8. The Picture of Dorian Gray and Three Stories: Oscar Wilde

9. Mistborn: The Final Empire: Brandon Sanderson

10. Hyperion: Dan Simmons

TRADE PAPERBACK FICTION

1. Remarkably Bright Creatures: Shelby Van Pelt

2. All Fours: Miranda July

3. Project Hail Mary: Andy Weir

4. Martyr!: Kaveh Akbar

5. The Ministry of Time: Kaliane Bradley

6. Creation Lake: A Novel: Rachel Kushner

7. Tomorrow, and Tomorrow, and Tomorrow: Gabrielle Zevin

8. I Who Have Never Known Men: Jacqueline Harpman

9. Funny Story: Emily Henry

10. The Safekeep: Yael van der Wouden

 

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11037602 2025-07-08T18:29:22+00:00 2025-07-10T19:12:56+00:00
Silverwood Lake Recreation Area remains closed, reservations canceled https://www.ocregister.com/2025/07/08/silverwood-lake-recreation-area-remains-closed-reservations-canceled/ Tue, 08 Jul 2025 22:37:47 +0000 https://www.ocregister.com/?p=11032511&preview=true&preview_id=11032511 Silverwood Lake Recreation Area remains closed, with no date for reopening set, state park officials announced.

On June 28, the Lake fire erupted near the recreation area south of Hesperia, consuming nearly 490 acres, prompting evacuations of all visitors and causing power outages. Officials closed the area, including a portion of the Pacific Coast Trail, and continued the closure through the Fourth of July weekend.

Officials said they would reassess conditions Monday, July 7, but the situation has not changed.

In a news release Monday, park officials said public safety hazards persist. The fire, now fully contained, has burned about 489 acres and damaged structures and infrastructure. A large portion of the Cleghorn Day Use Area is impacted, officials said, as are hillsides, roads and trails along the west side of Silverwood Lake, including portions of the Pacific Crest Trail.

As of midday Tuesday, Highway 138 remained closed from Old Mill Road to Highway 173.

Officials said the recreation area will remain closed until Highway 138 reopens, but they did not have an estimated date for the highway reopening.

In the meantime, all camping reservations will be canceled, officials said, and refunds will be processed through ReserveCalifornia.com.

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11032511 2025-07-08T15:37:47+00:00 2025-07-08T15:37:00+00:00
This map shows where the Rancho fire is burning in Laguna Beach https://www.ocregister.com/2025/07/07/this-map-shows-where-the-rancho-fire-is-burning-in-laguna-beach/ Mon, 07 Jul 2025 23:05:20 +0000 https://www.ocregister.com/?p=11030442&preview=true&preview_id=11030442 A brush fire in Laguna Beach threatened homes and prompted evacuations Monday. Nearly 100 homes were evacuated.

• For the latest, see: 13-year-old arrested on suspicion of setting off fireworks that sparked Rancho fire in Laguna Beach

13-year-old arrested on suspicion of setting off fireworks that sparked Rancho fire in Laguna Beach

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11030442 2025-07-07T16:05:20+00:00 2025-07-07T16:05:00+00:00
6 months later, 12 ways the Eaton and Palisades fires changed Southern California https://www.ocregister.com/2025/07/06/6-months-later-12-ways-the-eaton-and-palisades-fires-changed-southern-california/ Sun, 06 Jul 2025 13:00:02 +0000 https://www.ocregister.com/?p=11028469&preview=true&preview_id=11028469 Eric Swenson was in Altadena last week, in the waning days of his time in the Eaton and Palisades burn zones.

As of Monday, six months will have passed since the twin catastrophes exploded Jan. 7. The U.S. Army Corps of Engineers colonel who led the ash and debris cleanup paused in the sunshine in front of an empty parcel for the melancholy anniversary.

Six months and four million tons of fire ash and debris later, Swenson sought a silver lining.

“People here have already started to rebuild,” he said, noting that 9,500 properties have been cleared in less than five months between the two burn zones.

The rebuild has begun, however slowly.  But it’s happening. The charred remains of residential and commercial parcels along the coast and in the foothills are giving way to acres and acres of blank dirt slates, ready for their owners to come back.

But six months after the mammoth firestorm, unsettling questions linger about whether many of the displaced will return to communities generations of families called home. Those questions often turn to whether the character of beloved neighborhoods could ever be captured. Is the soil healthy? Is the air clean?

By June, 145 buyers took ownership of more than 220 homesites in the Palisades and Eaton fire zones. Will they be the vanguard of a growing wave of land sales caused by the January firestorms? Time is telling.

School districts, houses of worship and businesses, too, have their own questions, as they find their way back in scorched and emptied neighborhoods.

But one thing is for sure on the six-month anniversary of one of the most destructive natural disasters in the county’s history. In places such as Altadena, Palisades, Malibu, Pasadena, Sierra Madre, the disasters have brought lasting changes, some of which resonate beyond the confines of where the fire burned to much of Southern California.

It’s a picture that only time can bring in such a dramatic year, during which the fires have transitioned to recovery — a complex process underway against the backdrop of national political divisions, unrest and an uncertain economy.

In some cases, that picture is about heightened awareness of the risks facing this region. In others, it’s about bonding, relationships strengthened after tragedy.

Swenson himself was hopeful for the region.

“I personally look forward to coming back … to see my friends that I’ve made here, as they rebuild their homes, their lives and their livelihoods and start the next chapter of their lives,” he said.

Here is a collection of the changes that are evident in the burn zones and beyond as residents continue the journey to recovery at the six-month landmark.

Six-year-old Matilde White has her face painted during a community event celebrating the reopening of Grocery Outlet in Altadena on Monday, Feb. 17, 2025. (Photo by Drew A. Kelley, Press-Telegram/SCNG)
Six-year-old Matilde White has her face painted during a community event celebrating the reopening of Grocery Outlet in Altadena on Monday, Feb. 17, 2025. (Photo by Drew A. Kelley, Press-Telegram/SCNG)

1. Survivors have built community amid collective trauma

In person, online and via text, survivors of the Eaton fire are holding hands through the tough stuff.

Whether it was checking in hours after the fire, and commiserating with their loss and grief, Altadenans are leaning on their communal trauma to process their grief and share the unique challenges of “what’s next?”

The hundreds-strong Eaton Fire Survivors Network will gather in person for the first time on Monday, celebrating what’s come out from the fire: “a community of survivors, standing together, sharing resources, and enabling us all to recover faster and stronger.”

Sharing the post-everything good and bad of all things Eaton Fire is helping. One woman asked if anyone else had trouble cooking in the kitchen of her rental. The chore reduced her tears. Another complained about insurance waits and woes as well as a hair-pulling bureaucratic morass, to which many sympathized: we get it.

Others marked common milestones: getting their lot cleared, collecting soil for testing, their first Easter post-fire, first visit to El Patron, or Webster’s Pharmacy, Fair Oaks Burger or 1881 bar.

The members of Altadena Rotary Club, 14 of whom lost their homes, haven’t taken a pause since Jan. 7. Aside from fund-raising and volunteering at distribution events, the group is taking the full-house success of its Concerts in the Park to a newly-created stage at “Lower” Loma Alta Park. It won’t be Farnsworth Park, and they don’t know how many folks will show up. Dealing with uncertainty is par for the course now.

“Granted, it means that there will be those few difficult moments for folks who haven’t seen the latest phases of cleanup and rebuild, but rest assured that you will be greeted at the concerts by folks who are truly glad to see you and who’ve personally gone through what you’ve experienced,” said Altadena Rotary member René Amy.

Six months after disaster upended their lives, Altadenans are finding they still don’t agree with everyone, and their town will never be the same.

The hits will keep coming: will insurance money last? When can I return to my standing home? Survivors are finding what has stayed with them six months after the blaze isn’t the wind or the heat or the panic, it’s re-discovering community and belonging.

Many may find it watching Kenny Metcalf making like a young Elton John on stage at Loma Alta Park. He sounds pretty good.

The kid in front is dancing like a drunken sailor. You look around and realize you’ve seen many of these faces at the library, or Grocery Outlet. For a minute, stuff isn’t so tough. You take it. Bring on summer.

– Anissa Rivera

2. Thousands now have a common bond and identity: fire survivors

On any given street flattened by the Jan. 7 fire in the Pacific Palisades, a microcosmic representation of the choice residents face after the fire can be seen.

At one lot, a yard sign declares “this home will rise again, returning to the place we love.” At a neighboring property, a Realtor’s heavy wooden sign stands, declaring that lot is for sale.

As homeowners weigh the cost, both economic and personal, and time that it will take to rebuild, businesses also must decide if they want to come back.

Many have returned, from a hardware store hoping that the rebuilding could be a boon for them as suppliers of building materials, to restaurants opening their doors so that community members and workers can have somewhere to go.

Palisades real estate developer Rick Caruso promised the reopening of his luxurious retail center Palisades Village in 2026, seemingly looking to lead a comeback for the area’s shopping.

Things take time, and many residents look at a years-long timeline to rebuild, waiting on permits and insurance.

A not for sale sign on destroyed property in Pacific Palisades on Wednesday, July 2, 2025. Many of the homes and businesses in the Palisades were destroyed in the Palisades fire on Jan. 7th. (Photo by David Crane, Los Angeles Daily News/SCNG)
A not for sale sign on destroyed property in Pacific Palisades on Wednesday, July 2, 2025. Many of the homes and businesses in the Palisades were destroyed in the Palisades fire on Jan. 7th. (Photo by David Crane, Los Angeles Daily News/SCNG)

Palisades Charter High School, with the iconic Stadium by the Sea, will not return to their main campus in the fall, but will remain at “Pali South,” Santa Monica’s old Sears building repurposed into a school.

But among these decisions, to stay or go, when to come back, and those that have chosen one way or another or remain on the fence, the community has banded together, sharing in an identity as fire survivors, whether they find a new home or remain in the Palisades for years to come.

“The community members, because everyone now has this shared experience in their life, they’re all fire survivors,” said Col. Eric Swenson of the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers, the federal agency responsible for debris removal after the wildfires. “Whether they lost their home or didn’t, they had to evacuate. I think the community dynamics have gotten stronger, despite people being displaced.

“I think that will be one of the keys to help people rebuild, because it’ll keep their fire in their belly, that they want to get back and be with their former neighbors, they want to be back as a community and not be separated.”

Sierra van der Brug

Jeff Clark of Trident Inspection Group performs a home fire inspection, in Upland, Thursday, April 24, 2025. Fire-hardening/retrofitting inspectors and contractors have seen an uptick in their business since the LA County wildfires in Jan.. (Contributing Photographer/John Valenzuela)
Jeff Clark of Trident Inspection Group performs a home fire inspection, in Upland, Thursday, April 24, 2025. Fire-hardening/retrofitting inspectors and contractors have seen an uptick in their business since the LA County wildfires in Jan.. (Contributing Photographer/John Valenzuela)

3. Awareness of fire dangers have heightened

Throughout Southern California, residents are showing a heightened awareness of the dangers lurking in the wildlands abutting urban neighborhoods.

For some home-hardening companies, business has doubled since the Palisades and Eaton fires. Companies said they’re busy responding to calls for home inspections both in the fire zones and throughout the region.

Lisa and Ken Drew recently recently paid more than $500 to have a home-hardening company evaluate their property in Upland. While their home is 30 miles from Altadena, it’s just two miles from the San Gabriel Mountains. If there’s ever a fire, “we would like to be the ones whose house is still standing,” Lisa Drew said.

Pacific Palisades homeowner Robert Dickey, whose home survived, plans to replace all the attic and crawl-space vents in his house with modern, ember-resistant models. He’s also considering other retrofits, but only up to a point.

“We don’t have unlimited funds to do this,” he said.

Joe Torres, owner of wildfire prevention firm, All Risk Shield, said the recent firestorms gave folks a reality check.

“It doesn’t matter where you are, where you live, here in California there’s high susceptibility to fire risks,” Torres said. “People are realizing, I should do something about this.”

– Jeff Collins

Eric Wong, who is studying environmental science at UCLA, collects a surface soil sample from a home in the Eaton fire burn area in Altadena on Thursday, April 24, 2025. (Photo by Sarah Reingewirtz, Los Angeles Daily News/SCNG)
Eric Wong, who is studying environmental science at UCLA, collects a surface soil sample from a home in the Eaton fire burn area in Altadena on Thursday, April 24, 2025. (Photo by Sarah Reingewirtz, Los Angeles Daily News/SCNG)

4. Public health has emerged as a major recovery concern

As the Palisades and Eaton fires continued to burn days after first exploding on Jan. 7, the immediate concern of destroyed structures and evacuation zones shifted to a prolonged sense of vigilance over the public health impacts of the fires.

From air to water to soil, that vigilance continues six months later, and in some aspects will be in the minds of locals for years to come.

The housing stock and geographical location of each fire played a part in what health concerns developed.

Altadena’s historic homes, many built prior to 1979, used lead-based paint, which experts said found its way into the air in the early stages of the blaze and into the town and nearby Pasadena’s soil.

A Los Angeles County study found increased lead levels in soil taken from parcels downwind of the Eaton fire burn area. This prompted additional soil testing from local governments such as the Pasadena Unified School District, a self-testing program for residents and university sampling.

“It has given me pause to think, ‘is this a school I actually want my kids to go to?’” PUSD parent Corrine Parker said earlier this year.

The PUSD testing found more than half of district sites had a soil sample containing a concentration of a harmful substance which included lead, arsenic, chromium, Polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons (PAHs) and dioxins/furans.

The way debris was moved also opened eyes in the region. Many in local cities east of the Eaton fire, and those along the coast, have pushed back at agencies’ plans for staging and processing sites in or around local neighborhoods. Six months after the fire, the fervor over such sites appears to have fizzled, but the moment was eye-opener for local cities.

Unlike some other major wildfires in California, Altadena and the Pacific Palisades’ proximity to so many experts at the likes of JPL, Caltech, USC and UCLA meant more brains thinking through and researching the fires’ impacts and long-term ramifications.

“It is an L.A. thing,” said Fernando Guerra, professor of political science and Chicano-Latino studies at Loyola Marymount University earlier this year. “There are few other places in America or in the world where you have these non-governmental resources.”

-David Wilson

President Donald Trump listens to Gov. Gavin Newsom after arriving on Air Force One at Los Angeles International Airport in Los Angeles to confer about the fire disaster on Jan. 24, 2025. To many, Newsom has positioned himself as the face of the Trump resistance movement (AP photo by Mark Schiefelbein)
President Donald Trump listens to Gov. Gavin Newsom after arriving on Air Force One at Los Angeles International Airport in Los Angeles to confer about the fire disaster on Jan. 24, 2025. To many, Newsom has positioned himself as the face of the Trump resistance movement (AP photo by Mark Schiefelbein)

5. When — and if —  California gets more federal wildfire aid remains to be seen

Just a few weeks after the fires began — and only days after his second inauguration — President Donald Trump landed at LAX to take in the catastrophic damage.

Even before he landed, California leaders were saying they’d need the federal government’s help in the fires’ aftermath — although, just how big the ask would be wouldn’t come for a few more weeks — and Trump floated setting conditions on aid as a way to curtail certain Democratic policies in the state he loves to criticize.

Trump landed at LAX, shook hands with Gov. Gavin Newsom and vowed to “give you everything you want.”

Nearly six months later — and more than four months after Newsom formally requested nearly $40 billion in wildfire relief — California is still waiting to see if the president will make good on that promise, or how.

Newsom and Trump are in the midst of yet another smoldering kerfuffle, this time over immigration enforcement, and the White House has been in the midst of a tough battle to get the president’s $4.5 trillion tax and spending cuts bill through a divided Congress.

Will Trump eventually OK his political foe’s $40 billion request? Will Newsom, in turn, have to make concessions on a voter ID law or how the state handles its water management or even immigration policies?

Six months out, that still remains to be seen.

– Kaitlyn Schallhorn

6. ‘Altadena Strong’ carries through to governing, politics

There have been attempts to change the governance of Altadena since the fires, but they’ve failed. Instead, the town, population 43,000, has rejected annexation talk from Pasadena, wearing its independence as a badge of honor.

That badge has long defined the unincorporated town’s go-its-own-way character.

Still, six months after the town was pummeled, the community just north of Pasadena has relied even more heavily on Los Angeles County leaders and L.A. County departments for guidance on fire debris clearance, rebuilding, fast-track permitting and economic aid.

Los Angeles County Sup. Kathryn Barger visits with design builder Trinidad Campbell, left, and homeowner Margot Steuber, who lost her home in the Eaton fire, as construction begins for her new home in Altadena on Monday, April 28, 2025. (Photo by Sarah Reingewirtz, Los Angeles Daily News/SCNG)
Los Angeles County Sup. Kathryn Barger visits with design builder Trinidad Campbell, left, and homeowner Margot Steuber, who lost her home in the Eaton fire, as construction begins for her new home in Altadena on Monday, April 28, 2025. (Photo by Sarah Reingewirtz, Los Angeles Daily News/SCNG)

First District L.A. County Supervisor Kathryn Barger, the unofficial mayor of the unincorporated area, has emerged more powerful, a central figure during the crisis and perhaps for years to come.

“The buck stops with her,” said Michele Zack, the town’s historian and long-time resident who lost her ranch home in the Eaton fire. “We have been relying on the county.”

Connor Cipolla, a member of the advisory Altadena Town Council, said cooperation with county, state and federal resources have taken the top step in recovery.

“We are not working closer with the city of Pasadena,” he said, saying a proposal by Councilmember Tyron Hampton for annexation was rejected. “I have no interest in being a part of the city of Pasadena.”

He said the fires have solidified the unincorporated community’s working relationship with Barger and the county in general. “I am happy with the way the county is responding.”

However, Zack emphasized the community lacks planning authority and the Town Council has no real power.

She is very interested in a Rebuilding Authority plan put forth by Supervisor Lindsey Horvath and approved last week that sets up land-use planning, land banking and financing mechanisms in fire areas, pending buy-in from those cities/communities.

“That kind of action is needed,” Zack said.

-Steve Scauzillo

Destroyed homes from the Palisades Fire in the Alphabet Streets neighborhood of Pacific Palisades, CA, on Monday, January 27, 2025. The wind-whipped fire destroyed at least 23,448 acres and destroyed thousands of structures. This image is a composite of multiple aerial photos. (Photo by Jeff Gritchen, Orange County Register/SCNG)
A 10-unit building at 2058 Lake Avenue in Altadena is part of 9,500 rental units damaged or destroyed in the Eaton and Palisades fires. (Photo by Sarah Reingewirtz, Los Angeles Daily News/SCNG)

7.  Insurance costs spike statewide

Whether you live in Whittier or Yreka, six month later after the Palisades and Eaton catastrophes, you’re bound to feel the effects of the Los Angeles County wildfires when paying for homeowner insurance.

Premiums already were skyrocketing before January’s firestorms, thanks to a series of deadly conflagrations over the past decade that consumed almost 3 million acres.

Then came the L.A. County fires, which destroyed about 16,000 homes, buildings and other structures.

As of May, home and building owners had filed more than 38,000 insurance claims. And carriers had paid out at least $17.1 billion.

That burden will fall on consumers as well as private carriers. Two key events are spreading those costs statewide.

Five weeks after the fires began, the California FAIR Plan — which provides bare-bones fire coverage to customers who can’t find insurance elsewhere — ran out of money.

That triggered a $1 billion “assessment” — essentially passing the hat among licensed providers to cover the FAIR Plan’s claims. The private companies, in turn, are allowed to pass on half of those costs to their customers — everywhere in the state.

Then, State Farm, the state’s largest insurance company, requested a 22% emergency rate hike to cover wildfire losses and stop its “financial deterioration.”

Ultimately, State Farm won approval for a 17% increase, which will add $468 per year to its typical homeowner premium, one consumer group estimated.

-Jeff Collins

8. The wind and flames were biblical. Houses of worship are responding in kind

Biblical in their flames and fury, the fires inspired faith communities in L.A. and Altadena their paths to respond in kind. Six months later, they’ve held on to that response amid the headwinds of recovery.

Amara Ononiwu, director of fire aid and relief for the 200-member Clergy Community Coalition in Pasadena, said faith leaders were at the Pasadena Convention Center evacuation shelter comforting evacuees within hours of the center opening.

In all in the Eaton footprint, at least 11 churches burned in the blaze and 12 pastors lost their homes. Gone are historic structures such as the Altadena Community Church and St. Mark’s Episcopal Church, as well as Hillside Tabernacle of Faith and thriving Black community and Altadena Baptist Church, a landmark at the corner of El Molino Avenue and Calaveras Street since 1920.

Rev. Tom Eggebeen, interim pastor of Westminster Presbyterian Church, poses in the main chapel of the Pasadena church on Thursday, April 17, 2025. Rev. Eggebeen invited the Altadena Community Church, which was destroyed in the Eaton fire, to share their space. (Photo by Sarah Reingewirtz, Los Angeles Daily News/SCNG)
Rev. Tom Eggebeen, interim pastor of Westminster Presbyterian Church, poses in the main chapel of the Pasadena church on Thursday, April 17, 2025. Rev. Eggebeen invited the Altadena Community Church, which was destroyed in the Eaton fire, to share their space. (Photo by Sarah Reingewirtz, Los Angeles Daily News/SCNG)

What remained are relics of faith: a painting and a mural discovered after the fire at Pasadena Jewish Temple and Center; a statue of the Blessed Virgin Mary standing unscathed in the backyard of George and Jennifer Magallon’s Altadena home.

What has stayed are the people, meeting at borrowed spaces for now. LIFT International and Altadena Community worships at  Westminster Presbyterian Church in Pasadena, joining the congregation of LIFT International Church, which moved there from its Altadena building weeks before the fire. Masjid Al-Taqwa, founded by African American Muslims in the late 1970s, celebrated Eid al-Adha at New Horizon School in Pasadena.

It has also been using the Jackie Robinson Community Center and hope to settle into a semi-permanent location soon. The congregations of Lifeline Fellowship Christian Center and St. Mark’s have found host churches, too.

Days after the fire, Pastor Connie DeVaughn of Altadena Baptist Church reminded the faithful that “God doesn’t change when everything around us changes.”

“How you react is fine for you, so there are those who are energized after a crisis passes, and that’s wonderful, and there are people who are so impacted they just have to come and mourn. I say, ‘Be in that space of where they need to be.’”

Pasadena Jewish Temple members meet at First United Methodist Church in Pasadena, and when the new school year begins, its Louis B. Silver Religious School will be based at Frostig School, closer to its old neighborhood.

Its site is cleared now, and church leaders are working on rebuilding plans, leasing a long-term space, surveying its stakeholders, and welcoming its new permanent rabbi in August.

Faith leaders have said all along that their church isn’t a building. Even as they hold on to hope six months after disaster, members of the Clergy Community Coalition are showing up to vigils and rallies to address another crisis: immigration raids around the Valley.

The Rev. Mark Chase of All Saints Church in Pasadena said that is what it means to love your neighbor.

It was true for a literal fire and true six months on: “What we do matters. Keep showing up.”

-Anissa Rivera

Tenants impacted by the recent fires attended a rally outside of Los Angeles City Hall before the council discussed an eviction moratorium for renters affected by the recent fires, along with a one-year freeze on rent increases. Jan. 30, 2025 (Photo by David Crane, Los Angeles Daily News/SCNG)
Tenants impacted by the recent fires attended a rally outside of Los Angeles City Hall before the council discussed an eviction moratorium for renters affected by the recent fires, along with a one-year freeze on rent increases. Jan. 30, 2025 (Photo by David Crane, Los Angeles Daily News/SCNG)

9. Rents are surging across L.A. County

The Jan. 7 firestorms created a ripple effect throughout Los Angeles County’s rental market, driving up lease rates by the biggest margin among U.S. cities for two consecutive months.

Perhaps 18,000 households were displaced by the Palisades and Eaton fires. More than 11,000 lost their homes in the conflagrations. Thousands more couldn’t return because smoke damage and toxins left their residences uninhabitable.

The fires triggered a frenzy among fire victims to find alternative housing, generating bidding wars among the newly homeless and opportunistic price gouging among landlords.

By February, rent growth for a Los Angeles County house more than doubled to 7.2% — the biggest increase among U.S. metro areas that month, according to real estate data firm Cotality (formerly CoreLogic).

By comparison, the national average that month was 2.9%.

The increase was most pronounced in high-end rentals, “because of the types of households that were impacted,” said Cotality Chief Economist Selma Hepp. February saw the price of top-tier rentals jump 9.1%, vs. 3.7% nationwide.

The county’s rent growth was the nation’s biggest again in March.

Overall rent growth for a house subsided to 4.7% by April, the most recent figure available, but that was still 1.8 times greater than rent hikes a year earlier.

The increases have also spurred concerns about rent-gouging, and given rise to efforts to quell it.

Users on Reddit and Instagram would search rentals around L.A. and Ventura Counties on Zillow, zeroing in on suspicious listings that seemed to show the illegal amount of increase in rent costs after the fires. They’d then report these listings to crowdsourced spreadsheets like that of the Rent Brigade, a self-described group of Angelenos who are tracking rent cost data to address the housing crisis.

As a supplement to state law, a prohibition against rental price-gouging was extended for 30 days by the Los Angeles County Board of Supervisors June 24.

The board voted to extend current limits on rent increases for motels, hotels, apartments, condos and single-family houses in the county in order to protect tenants, tens of thousands of whom are still in temporary housing after displacement by the fires.

-Jeff Collins and Gladys B. Vargas

A mural by artist Pamela Key is seen on Wednesday, June 25, 2025 on her father Charlie Hogarty's home on Mendocino Street in Altadena where some homes survived the Eaton fire. (Photo by Sarah Reingewirtz, Los Angeles Daily News/SCNG)
A mural by artist Pamela Key is seen on Wednesday, June 25, 2025 on her father Charlie Hogarty’s home on Mendocino Street in Altadena where some homes survived the Eaton fire. (Photo by Sarah Reingewirtz, Los Angeles Daily News/SCNG)

10. Survivors are contemplating a return, while others have left

Where have all the people from Altadena gone?

Some moved to rentals in Pasadena, Alhambra, Glendora or La Verne. And some preferred to get away, farther away, putting distance between them and the ruins of the Eaton fire exactly six months ago. Far from the haunting reminder of a home and a community that once was, but are no more.

Jennifer and George Magallon are renting a house in Palm Springs, about 110 miles from east of Altadena, the place they called home for the past five years before Jan. 7 swept that away.

“It’s hard when you live with that constant reminder,” began George Magallon on Wednesday, July 2. “Here in Palm Springs, it has helped us to reset.

“We moved to get away from it all, to get our minds away from it, to get away from the smell, to get away from all of it,” he said. “For us, we needed this.”

On the TV news, the biggest story is the temperatures of the day. People in town are chatty and the conversations are not about fires or insurance companies. “It’s that friendliness that is very refreshing,” he said, as well as the margaritas at Tommy Bahama on North Palm Canyon Drive.

They’d ask people at eateries where is the nearest Trader Joe’s. They’d get responses, he said, unlike in Los Angeles County where people are “in their own bubble.” To find the nearest grocery store, they’d just get in the car and drive until they found one, skipping the GPS.

A real estate agent told him he had five other customers from Altadena, and two from the Palisades. George, 56, has grown children who live in L.A. County. Jennifer and her husband go back once a week; she to her massage and Botox business in Pasadena, and he to their empty lot to care for their trees.

“I have lemon trees, avocado trees and peach trees. I give them water and they are happy. I feel like that is my obligation,” he said.

Six months later, the Magallons aren’t the only ones.

Thousands are waiting to return and rebuild. And many are contemplating whether to return to the Eaton and the Palisades burn zones.

-Steve Scauzillo

11. Six months later, ‘Denas’ more intertwined than ever

While very different places, Altadena and Pasadena have always been connected both geographically and culturally. Decisions in both communities having ripple effects into the other.

However, they’ve arguably never been more intertwined than in the last six months since the Eaton fire struck both. As many officials and residents have said since the blaze, a fire knows no city boundaries or political differences.

Another refrain from local leaders is the focus on referring to both areas as simply Dena.

In the Pasadena Unified School District, both Denas are represented in the schools and families under its jurisdiction. According to the district, the fire impacted about half of district staff and 10,000 of its 14,000 students.

“In that moment the fragility of what we’ve built together became very clear,” PUSD Board President Jennifer Hall Lee said during the annual State of the Schools address. “Schools, neighborhoods and communities. They are strong but they are not invincible. What keeps them going is our shared care and commitment.”

Five campuses either burned down or suffered severe damage in the Eaton fire. Altadena Arts Magnet survived the fire but its students also needed to be relocated due to the proximity of the destruction to the campus.

Pasadena campuses have become temporary homes for displaced students and questions still remain about the long-term plans for those students whose schools no longer exist in the same way they did prior to Jan. 7.

Instructional coach Lauren Partma, Principal John Maynard and Pasadena Unified School District Sup. Elizabeth Blanco welcome children back to Don Benito Fundamental School in Pasadena on Wednesday, Jan. 29, 2025 as PUSD continues to bring students back to school after the Eaton fire closed the district. (Photo by Sarah Reingewirtz, Los Angeles Daily News/SCNG)
Instructional coach Lauren Partma, Principal John Maynard and Pasadena Unified School District Sup. Elizabeth Blanco welcome children back to Don Benito Fundamental School in Pasadena on Wednesday, Jan. 29, 2025 as PUSD continues to bring students back to school after the Eaton fire closed the district. (Photo by Sarah Reingewirtz, Los Angeles Daily News/SCNG)

Decisions made by the district about when to return students, where they returned and how to handle the future that is clouded by financial problems caused strife among families simultaneously grappling with losing everything.

“Just on every level PUSD, we have felt as a family, they’ve shown us that they don’t care about the safety of kids,” parent Alexis Brooks said earlier this year.

In just over a month, students of the Dena school district will return for a school year still swirling with uncertainty and a new understanding of how close Altadena and Pasadena truly are.

-David Wilson

Inspections of the Southern California Edison transmission towers alleged to be responsible for igniting the Eaton fire above Altadena and Pasadena continued on Thursday, March 20, 2025. Crews climbed the Eaton Canyon transmission towers looking for evidence that could ultimately determine the company's liability. (Photo by Dean Musgrove, Los Angeles Daily News/SCNG)
Inspections of the Southern California Edison transmission towers alleged to be responsible for igniting the Eaton fire above Altadena and Pasadena continued on Thursday, March 20, 2025. Crews climbed the Eaton Canyon transmission towers looking for evidence that could ultimately determine the company’s liability. (Photo by Dean Musgrove, Los Angeles Daily News/SCNG)

12. Scrutiny on utilities has deepened

Six months later, there’s an acknowledgment among Southern California Edison executives that the Rosemead-based utility’s equipment may have ignited the blaze. That acknowledgement dovetails with broader scrutiny and awareness in Southern California on the role that utilities are playing in giant fires.

In April, Pedro Pizarro, president and CEO of Edison International, the parent company of Southern California Edison, told investors that the utility’s equipment could be what ignited the mammoth Eaton fire, in lieu of other evidence.He added that the company likely would suffer significant financial losses if found liable, given that no other potential cause of the blaze has been identified.

The evidence on that cause has been stacking up over the months, so much so that dozens of plaintiffs have consolidated their claims against the utility into one case alleging that sparks from the lines or current from an exposed grounding wire made contact with the brush. They also criticize SCE for not de-energizing all the power lines in Eaton Canyon after the utility was warned days ahead that powerful winds were coming.

By May, helicopters were assisting SCE workers in the dismantling of an idle transmission tower central to the investigation into the cause.

A leading theory is that a tower that had been dormant for more than 50 years became reenergized in the high winds through a phenomenon called “induction.”

Southern Californians are already feeling the impact of the scrutiny on the utility. For one, the utility pledged to rebuild infrastructure damaged in the devastating fires, including major efforts to underground its lines. And, as the region moves into the heart of summertime, the utility is warning customers that it expects to increase the number of power shutoffs this summer to reduce the risk of wildfires.

-Ryan Carter

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Los Alamitos horse racing consensus picks for Sunday, July 6, 2025 https://www.ocregister.com/2025/07/05/los-alamitos-horse-racing-consensus-picks-for-sunday-july-6-2025/ Sun, 06 Jul 2025 01:12:48 +0000 https://www.ocregister.com/?p=11028046&preview=true&preview_id=11028046 The consensus box of Los Alamitos horse racing picks comes from handicappers Bob Mieszerski, Eddie Wilson, Kevin Modesti and Mark Ratzky. Here are the picks for thoroughbred races on Sunday, July 6, 2025.

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Los Alamitos horse racing consensus picks for Saturday, July 5, 2025 https://www.ocregister.com/2025/07/04/los-alamitos-horse-racing-consensus-picks-for-saturday-july-5-2025/ Sat, 05 Jul 2025 02:55:58 +0000 https://www.ocregister.com/?p=11027167&preview=true&preview_id=11027167 The consensus box of Los Alamitos horse racing picks comes from handicappers Bob Mieszerski, Eddie Wilson, Kevin Modesti and Mark Ratzky. Here are the picks for thoroughbred races on Saturday, July 5, 2025.

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