Just 38% of the 22,500 homes burned down in California's five most destructive wildfires from 2017 to 2020 have been rebuilt, ...
Local News Matters on MSN
Rebuilding in wildfire areas carries risk of repeat fires. How Santa Rosa is taking action
EIGHT YEARS AGO, Cross Creek Road, a winding street in Santa Rosa's upscale Fountaingrove development, was flanked by oak ...
Over the last eight years, wildfires have burned down more houses than at any time in California history. Decades of ...
The Palisades Fire was the most destructive blaze in Los Angeles to date and among the five worst in California’s history.
The most destructive blaze that year was the North Complex fire, which was ignited by a lightning strike in the Plumas ...
A sprawling energy package passed at the eleventh hour by lawmakers includes a massive infusion to the state’s wildfire restitution fund, but survivors of past Northern California fires ...
In 2017, after the Tubbs Fire blazed through parts of California’s wine country, a Santa Rosa resident returned home to one of the few structures left standing in his fire-scarred neighborhood. He ...
Seventy percent of the 20 most destructive wildfires in state history have occurred since fall 2017, according to the California Department of Forestry and Fire Protection. To understand the pace and ...
Recent storms and cooler weather helped ease Santa Rosa’s fire risk, allowing the city to scale back its wildfire readiness — ...
On a hill in Sonoma County, François Piccin yearns to return home. In fall 2017, Piccin and his wife lost their ranch house when the Tubbs fire roared through Northern California's famed wine region.
In California, only 38% of homes destroyed by wildfires from 2017 to 2020 have been rebuilt. Wealthier areas like Santa Rosa's Coffey Park have rebounded faster than rural regions like Butte County.
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