Artist designs sculpture from Paradise Camp Fire house keys
A woman from Paradise, California has created a phoenix sculpture from thousands of donated keys to places destroyed in California's deadliest wildfire last November.
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A woman from Paradise, California has created a phoenix sculpture from thousands of donated keys to places destroyed in California's deadliest wildfire last November.
Pacific Gas & Electric acknowledged Thursday that it will likely be found responsible for the deadliest wildfire in California history.
In the three months since a fire virtually wiped out their town, everything in the lives of Paradise High School students has been temporary -- their housing, their day-to-day routines, the faceless office park they attend classes in.
Authorities on Friday revised the death toll from last autumn's devastating Camp Fire in Northern California, the deadliest blaze in the state's history.
Pacific Gas and Electric has filed for bankruptcy protection after coming under pressure from billions of dollars in claims tied to deadly wildfires.
Pacific Gas and Electric, facing billions of dollars in claims over the deadly 2018 Camp Fire, is headed to bankruptcy court.
Four-year-old Riley Wooten has always been a curious kid who asks a million questions.
The number of people still unaccounted for after the devastating Camp Fire in Northern California has dropped to 11, the Butte County Sheriff's Office said.
From California to Louisiana, breweries across the United States are coming together to help survivors of the Camp Fire.
Flash floods carrying piles of debris are sweeping through rain-drenched parts of California that were affected by recent wildfires.
A federal judge has ordered California's Pacific Gas & Electric Co. to explain any potential role it played causing the deadly Camp Fire and any other major wildfires in the state, court documents show.
While much-needed rain falling in parts of Northern California could help firefighters battling the Camp Fire, it could also prompt powerful mudslides and debris flow, adding to the devastation for communities that have already been ravaged by the flames.
Cats. Dogs. Hamsters. Ducks. Horses. Pigs. Lizards. Macaws. Chinchillas.
First, the good news: Heavy rain expected this week won't just drench Northern California's Camp Fire. It could also snuff out the risk of new wildfires for the rest of the year.
Rescue workers on Tuesday combed through debris of a charred mobile home park in Northern California, searching for the possible remains of victims with urgency before the rains started.
The deadliest wildfire in California history will hurt the health of people who may never have seen the flames.
More than a week into three California fires, authorities are painstakingly searching for missing people and remains in ravaged neighborhoods.
The death toll in Northern California's Camp Fire climbed by one person to a total of 77 on Sunday while the list of those unaccounted for dropped from nearly 1,300 to 993.
What started as the wind-driven wildfires common in California escalated into fast-moving infernos, roaring through homes and sending thousands fleeing in the middle of the night.
Hundreds of people poured Wednesday into the Northern California communities ravaged by the deadly Camp Fire, searching for human remains while authorities tried to track down 130 people who are unaccounted for after the blaze.
Brad Weldon grabbed a garden hose as the Camp Fire approached his house, spraying water to keep the flames at bay and protect his disabled, elderly mother inside.
Tracy Grant was in a parking lot handing out hamburgers to evacuees from the devastating Camp Fire in Northern California when she encountered Lee Brundige.
When Jeff Hill returned to his neighborhood in Paradise, California, after evacuating during the Camp fire, he came across a wayward horse -- in a backyard swimming pool. The horse appeared to have jumped in to escape the flames, and was caught in the pool cover.
An additional 13 sets of human remains were discovered Monday in Northern California, bringing the death toll from the Camp Fire to 42, making it the deadliest wildfire in the state's history, the sheriff of Butte County said.