10 Jan 2025

Far from Hollywood's wealth, Los Angeles fire survivors feel forgotten

8:47 pm on 10 January 2025

By Joe Brock, Reuters

ALTADENA, CALIFORNIA - JANUARY 09: A resident inspects the remains of her home that was destroyed by the Eaton Fire on January 09, 2025 in Altadena, California. Multiple wildfires fueled by intense Santa Ana Winds are burning across Los Angeles County. At least five people have been killed, and over 25,000 acres have burned. Over 2,000 structures have also burned and almost 180,000 people are under orders to evacuate.  (Photo by Justin Sullivan/Getty Images)

A resident inspects the remains of her home that was destroyed by the Eaton Fire in Altadena, California. Photo: Justin Sullivan / Getty Images

In the close-knit Los Angeles suburb of Altadena, where rows of neat bungalows once nestled in the shadow of the San Gabriel mountains, smouldering ruins and the skeletal frames of burnt out cars now lie.

While the fires that had devastated celebrity neighbourhoods near Malibu caught the world's attention, a similar size blaze in Eaton Canyon, north of Los Angeles, had ravaged Altadena, a racially and economically diverse community.

Black and Latino families had lived in Altadena for generations and the suburb was also popular with younger artists and engineers working at the nearby NASA rocket lab, who were attracted by the small town vibe and access to nature.

Many residents told Reuters they were concerned government resources would be channelled towards high-profile areas popular with A-Listers, while insurance companies might short-change less affluent households that didn't have the financial means to contest fire claims.

"They're not going to give you the value of your house ... if they do you really have to fight for it," Kay Young, 63, said as her eyes welled up with tears and she stared at a sprawl of smoking rubble, the remnants of a home that had been in her family for generations.

Danielle Maki displays an item she found in the remains of her brother's home burned in the Eaton fire in the Altadena area of Los Angeles county, California on January 9, 2025. Massive wildfires that engulfed whole neighborhoods forcing over 100,000 people to flee their homes and claiming at least five lives in Los Angeles remained totally uncontained on January 9, authorities said, as US National Guard soldiers readied to hit the streets to help quell disorder. (Photo by JOSH EDELSON / AFP)

Danielle Maki displays an item she found in the remains of her brother's home burned in the Eaton fire in the Altadena area of Los Angeles county, California on 9 January 2025. Photo: JOSH EDELSON / AFP

Inez Moore, 40, whose family home in Altadena was destroyed by the fire, said communities like theirs would likely suffer financially more than wealthier suburbs because many people didn't have the resources or experience to navigate complex bureaucratic systems.

"You're going to have some folks who are not going to get as much as they deserve, and some folks who may get more than actually they need," Moore, a lecturer at California State University, said.

Moore, Young and several other residents told Reuters they didn't see any fire engines in Altadena in the early hours of Wednesday when they fled flames engulfing their community, fuelling a resentment that their neighbourhood wasn't a priority.

"We didn't get help here. I don't know where everybody was," Jocelyn Tavares, 32, said as her sister and daughter dug through the smoking debris of a life upended - a child's bicycle half-melted, a solitary cup miraculously spared from the flames.

Los Angeles County Fire Department did not respond to a request for comment about the residents' complaints.

Plans to rebuild

A Bank of America is fully engulfed in flames along Lake Ave. during the Eaton fire in the Altadena area of Los Angeles county, California on January 8, 2025. At least five people are now known to have died in wildfires raging around Los Angeles, with more deaths feared, law enforcement said January 8, as terrifying blazes leveled whole streets, torching cars and houses in minutes.
More than 1,000 buildings have burned in multiple wildfires that have erupted around America's second biggest city, forcing tens of thousands of people from their homes. (Photo by JOSH EDELSON / AFP)

A Bank of America fully engulfed in flames during the Eaton fire in the Altadena area of Los Angeles county, California on January 8. Photo: AFP / Josh Edelson

Since breaking out on Tuesday night, the Eaton Fire had killed at least five people and grown to 13,690 acres as of Thursday night, consuming much of the northern half of Altadena, an unincorporated community of some 40,000 people.

As late as 1960, Altadena was almost entirely white. As new highways built in urban renewal projects tore apart Los Angeles neighbourhoods, African American families began buying homes in what remained for decades a relatively affordable community.

Residents told Reuters they paid around $50,000 for a three-bedroom home in Altadena in the 1970s. The same house would cost more than $1 million today.

By 1990, nearly 40% of residents were Black. Today, about 18% were Black, 49% white and 27% were Hispanic or Latino, according to the US Census Bureau.

Altadena residents voiced concerns that the area may become more gentrified if families who had lived there for generations could not secure insurance payouts to cover the cost to rebuild a home that they bought cheap decades ago.

Despite the widespread wreckage, many locals were upbeat about the community rising from the ashes, sharing tales of narrow escapes and memories of decades spent growing up together with neighbours who were now sharing in the disaster.

"There are rows of us that went to school together," Young said, gesturing to a vast stretch of scorched foundations.

A clerk in the City of Los Angeles Michael McCarthy, 68, said his home was saved by a neighbour who risked his life by staying behind after everyone else had fled, using a hose to spray water on their roofs.

"I know this community will rebuild, everybody knows everybody here, everybody loves everybody," McCarthy said, who was due to retire this year.

"Well, I got a new job now, and that's putting all this back together and do what I can for the neighbourhood."

- Reuters

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