For the Valley 31 years later, the 1994 Northridge earthquake was a defining moment, testing the resilience of its residents and the strength of its community institutions.
That’s the day that In-N-Out opened across the street. “They’re the gorilla in the room,” says Darlas, though it wasn’t ...
Civic leaders in the region believe that side efforts are necessary to rebuild after the wildfires. They just can’t settle on ...
Close to half a million Californians use the FAIR plan for their homeowners’ insurance coverage. From September 2023 to ...
The Palisades and Eaton fires destroyed or damaged more than 8,500 homes in an already tight housing market. Experts said the ...
I felt a temblor stronger than the Northridge earthquake of 1994. Four years of unfettered “rule” by Trump will take decades to recover from, if we ever do. In another op-ed article about ...
LA Times on MSN18d
California's FAIR Plan, the home insurer of last resort, may need a bailout after the L.A. firesNow, however, the FAIR Plan is facing its biggest crisis since the 1994 Northridge earthquake, when it was bailed out by the state's licensed property insurance companies, which operate the plan and ...
The Northridge Earthquake in Southern California happened just one year earlier, in 1994. The two events killed 6,400 people, injured 45,000, and left a half million people homeless. "These two ...
Thousands of housing units destroyed, with tens of thousands of Angelenos forced out of their homes and apartments. Tens of ...
President Bill Clinton squats as he surveys a crater on Balboa Avenue in the Northridge area of the San Fernando Valley in Los Angeles on Wednesday, Jan. 19, 1994, caused by Monday’s earthquake ...
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Hosted on MSNHonor The Past Without Shame: Anniversaries Pass, Trauma RemainsEven as the wildfires of California continue, having affected an estimated 200,000 residents and resulted in 27 deaths, the ...
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