An atmospheric river began hammering down in Southern California, bringing heavy rain and triggering mandatory evacuation orders in some areas.
Despite widespread stress, smoke inhalation and other disruptions caused by the January wildfires, a majority of Los Angeles County residents are happy with their lives here and don't plan to leave.
Parts of the city had been urged to evacuate as a powerful system brought rain and snow up and down the state.
When Meg Volk and her husband Ron moved to Granada Hills with their infant son in 1991, Sunshine Canyon Landfill in Sylmar ...
Here is a sampling of things to do in the San Fernando Valley and the greater Los Angeles area.
A popular East Louisville restaurant is opening a second location in St. Matthews this week. The new Limon y Sal location ...
Wheat grower, grain miller, and fully in-house operation Roan Mills is one of the most unique bakeries in Southern California ...
It’s been half a century since the fall of Saigon in April 1975, when Lâm and his family left their native Vietnam for a new ...
The applicant behind the proposed 259-unit Seaside Ridge project in Del Mar is urging the city to “put down its sword” in ...
Amber Lane Celmer, the executive director of HomeAid Sacramento, explains how the building industry can better address the ...
Rose B. Sorensen is a corporate and securities partner in Snell & Wilmer, a full-service business law firm with more than 450 ...