Embattled Los Angeles Mayor Karen Bass has revealed that her brother lost his Malibu home in the still-raging Palisades wildfires.
Los Angeles Mayor Karen Bass said Thursday that her brother was among the thousands of people who lost their homes in the Palisades fire.
California is seeking federal emergency aid from Trump and Congress as it continues to recover from the fires, with several blazes still not fully extinguished. The Palisades fire was at 79 percent containment with an estimated 23,448 acres burned as of Friday night, according to Cal Fire.
LA Mayor Karen Bass and LA Chief Recovery Officer Steve Soboroff discuss efforts to help Pacific Palisades recover and quickly rebuild after the devastating fire.
LA residents informed Bass that they’ve been told it will be 18 months before they can start rebuilding — a claim the mayor said wasn’t the case.
To escape the deadly and historic fire, all residents are now allowed to briefly enter the burn areas so they can survey the destruction. Meanwhile, L.A. Mayor Karen Bass is trying to reassure residents the city is moving as quickly as it can to boost the recovery process.
As local voters say they have lost confidence in the mayor, a presidential visit gave her a platform to plead her case. Then the president intervened.
LA Mayor Karen Bass’s popularity has taken a nose dive over her handling of the wildfires, with a shocking number of residents in the famously liberal city now even willing to vote Republican, a
President Donald Trump and Los Angeles Karen Bass tangled at a roundtable discussion on the wildfire cleanup in the Pacific Palisades. KAREN BASS, LOS ANGELES MAYOR: Well, and let me just tell you that we are going to do everything we can,
Nearly 153,000 people have signed a petition demanding Los Angeles Mayor Karen Bass resign, citing mismanagement of the city's wildfire crisis.
Mayor Karen Bass and Steve Soboroff, the city’s newly appointed recovery czar, announced a plan to hire an outside consultant to manage “a significant rebuilding contract” to get the job done, the Los Angeles Times reported.