Eaton, Palisades fires continue burning as new wildfires erupts

Last updated: Saturday, January 11, 2025 3:49AM GMT
ABC7 Eyewitness News
Stream Southern California's News Leader and Original Shows 24/7

LOS ANGELES (KABC) -- As the fire fight continues against the Eaton Fire and the Palisades Fire, new brush fires continue to crop up, the latest in the West Hills area.

Red flag warnings are in effect and will remain in place until 6 p.m. Friday for the Malibu coast, the Santa Monica Mountains Recreational Area, the San Gabriel Valley, the San Fernando Valley, Calabasas, the Santa Clarita Valley, the San Gabriel Mountains, and the 5 Freeway and 14 Freeway corridors.

Key Headlines

Here's how the news is developing.
KABC logo
Jan 11, 2025, 1:35 AM

Wildfires burning in SoCal: Numbers at a glance

Here are all the wildfires burning in Southern California at a glance.

Kenneth Fire in West Hills

- 1,052 acres

- 50% contained

Eaton Fire in San Gabriel Valley

- 13,956 acres
- 3% contained
- Approximately 7,081 structures believed to be damaged or destroyed (structures includes vehicles)
- 6 deaths
- 4 firefighter injuries
- 1,603 fire personnel assigned
- Cause of fire unknown

Palisades Fire

- 21,317 acres
- 5 deaths
- 5,316 structures burned
- 8% containment

Hurst Fire in Sylmar

- 771 acres

- 70% contained

Lidia Fire in Acton area

- 395 acres

- 75% contained

Sunset Fire in Hollywood Hills area

- 42.8 acres
- 100% containment
- All evacuation orders lifted

Sunswept Fire in Studio City

- Structure fire encompassed two homes and brush, extended into adjacent brush
- Stopped forward progress at just under 1 acre

Tyler Fire

- 11 acres, contained

Woodley Fire in Sepulveda Basin

- 30 acres, contained
- 100% containment
- Declared knockdown and no current threats

KABC logo
Jan 10, 2025, 10:58 PM GMT

Firefighters from Mexico to join battle against Eaton Fire

Firefighters from Mexico are en route to the Eaton Fire, Gov. Gavin Newsom announced Friday.

They will be joining more than 10,000 personnel already on the ground battling the fires.

"California is deeply grateful for President [Claudia Sheinbaum's] support as we work to suppress the Los Angeles wildfires," said Gov. Newsom on X. "Our partnership and shared commitment to helping communities in need is greatly valued."

As of 2:50 p.m., the Eaton Fire had burned 13,690 acres and was at 3% containment. At least 3 deaths have been reported in relation to this fire. More than 7,000 structures have burned.

ByZohreen Shah ABCNews logo
Jan 10, 2025, 11:59 PM GMT

Firefighters find Altadena woman's wedding ring in rubble

Victoria DeSantis had seconds to evacuate her Altadena home this week when the Eaton Fire broke out. She left so quickly, she left behind her wedding and engagement rings.

She returned to find her home of 20 years had turned into rubble, and sifted through debris to find her melted engagement ring. She thought the wedding band had melted in with it as well.

A firefighter was on the ground searching with her and found the wedding band seemingly untouched by the blaze.

Victoria DeSantis holds her wedding band after it was found in the ruble after the Altadena Fire swept through her house. The band was seemingly untouched by the blaze.
Victoria DeSantis holds her wedding band after it was found in the ruble after the Altadena Fire swept through her house. The band was seemingly untouched by the blaze.

She says it was one bright light during a very dark week. DeSantis started a GoFundMe to help raise funds to help rebuild her neighborhood.

AP logo
Jan 10, 2025, 9:49 PM GMT

Total damage estimates due to wildfires could reach $150 billion

Firefighters are hoping for a break Friday from the fierce winds that have fueled massive blazes in the Los Angeles area, killing 10 people, obliterating whole neighborhoods and setting the nation's second-largest city on edge.

AccuWeather, a private company that provides data on weather and its impact, on Thursday increased its estimate of the damage and economic loss to $135-$150 billion.

Previously, the company had estimated the damage could reach $57 billion.

The fires have burned more than 10,000 homes and other structures since Tuesday. No cause has been identified yet for the largest fires.

Jan 10, 2025, 8:08 PM GMT

More erroneous emergency alerts raise frustrations

More erroneous evacuation alerts were sent to tens of thousands of residents overnight, prompting frustration and waves of criticism from people already on edge from the Southern California wildfires, but officials are not yet sure what caused those errors.

Kevin McGowan, director of the county Office of Emergency Management, stressed during a news conference Friday morning that the alerts are "not human driven."

"There is no one sitting at a desk right now initiating emergency alerts," McGowan said. "... They are not being activated or initiated by a person."

He said he is coordinating with the Federal Emergency Management Agency to "resolve this issue and find the root cause."

More erroneous evacuation alerts were sent to tens of thousands of residents overnight, prompting frustration and waves of criticism from people already on edge from the Southern California wildfires, but officials are not yet sure what caused those errors.

The first erroneous alert was sent around 4 p.m. Thursday, shortly after the Kenneth Fire broke out in the West Hills area. The alert about evacuation warnings was only supposed to be sent to people in the affected area near that fire, but instead, it was sent to cell phones throughout most of the county, including residents in the South Bay, the Westside, downtown Los Angeles, the San Fernando Valley, even as far away as Orange County.

A short time after that, another message was sent telling residents who weren't in the affected area to disregard it.

However, another erroneous message was sent out around 4 a.m. Friday, again intended for people in the Kenneth Fire burn area but transmitted instead to people across the region, even in San Bernardino County.

McGowan on Friday morning said "this is my top priority" to determine what technical error is causing the erroneous alerts.

"I implore everyone to not disable the messages on your phone. This is extremely frustrating, painful and scary, but these alert tools have saved lives during this emergency," he said. "Not receiving an alert can be a consequence of life and death."

McGowan suggested that people who receive the alerts go online to verify the information at alertla.org or lacounty.gov/emergency, or call 211.

County Supervisor Kathryn Barger, however, expressed frustration at the situation Friday morning, noting that people shouldn't have to go online to verify emergency alerts.

"It is frustrating because we are asking people to trust us," Barger said, adding that the problem needs to be fixed immediately.

City News Service contributed to this report.