For the latest on all the fires affecting Southern California visit Fire.ca.gov. For LA County visit LACounty.gov/emergency or LAFD.org/alerts. For safety tips and other information on how to prepare for emergencies and evacuations visit fire.lacounty.gov.
ALTADENA (CNS) – The deadly Eaton Fire in Altadena and Pasadena is 45% contained Wednesday, while red flag warnings of critical fire danger will be in place over the burn area — and much of the Southland — through 6 p.m. with some areas under the alert until Thursday afternoon.
Containment efforts are steadily progressing along the eastern edge of the fire near Santa Ana Canyon, fire officials said. The mobile retardant base at Mount Wilson remains active providing fire retardant for helicopters to drop in inaccessible terrain, where ground crews cannot construct containment line.
Infrared flights have identified isolated heat pockets within the interior of the fire area, where fuels continue to burn out. Tactical patrols and mop-up operations continue along the northern perimeter of the fire.
Hand crews are actively clearing brush and constructing contingency lines in critical areas of La Cañada Flintridge. Contingency resources are strategically prepositioned throughout communities along the fire’s western edge to due to the Santa Ana wind conditions.
Urban Search and Rescue efforts, infrastructure assessments, hazardous materials response and damage assessment operations are ongoing for the communities on the southern edge of the fire. These operations are unprecedented in size and scale and are critical for mitigating existing hazards, confirming missing persons reports and obtaining accurate number of structures damaged or destroyed, officials said.
Powerful winds that were expected to begin blowing Tuesday never fully materialized, prompting the National Weather Service to lower high-wind warnings to less-serious wind advisories, and to delay imposition of a “Particularly Dangerous Situation” red flag warning until 3 a.m. Wednesday.
As of 7 a.m. Wednesday, the Eaton Fire had burned 14,117 acres, with containment rising to 45%. It was 35% contained as of 7:17 p.m. Tuesday.
The Los Angeles County Medical Examiner’s Office on Tuesday reported 17 deaths tied to the Eaton Fire, up from 16 on Monday. Sheriff Robert Luna said he anticipates that number to rise. He said deputies and firefighters are conducting a grid search of the burn area, which he called “a very grim task.”
Luna said the sheriff’s department has 24 active missing-person cases – – 18 in the Eaton Fire area and six others in the Malibu area near the Palisades Fire.
Mandatory evacuation orders remained in place for thousands of residents in the Eaton Fire area, although on Tuesday afternoon, orders were lifted for an area south of Canyon Crest Road and west of Lincoln Avenue in the Altadena area, according to the sheriff’s department.
On Monday, evacuations were lifted in the Altadena Kinneloa Mesa community, in an area south of Heights Road to New York Drive, and east of Outpost Lane to Sierra Madre Villa. Only residents will be permitted in the area.
Los Angeles County Fire Department Chief Anthony Marrone said earlier that more than 7,000 structures are believed to have been destroyed or damaged – – many of them homes — and nearly 40,000 structures were said to be threatened. Those numbers were expected to rise after further evaluation.
Damage assessments in the Eaton Fire area were about 45% completed as of Wednesday morning, 4,627 have been officially reported as destroyed, and 486 damaged.
Cal Fire reported that detailed damage inspection maps for properties within the Eaton Fire footprint showing damaged or destroyed homes — as well as homes that are not damaged or destroyed — can be found at fire.ca.gov/incidents/2025/1/7/eaton-fire.
Los Angeles County officials said its damage assessments can be viewed at recovery.lacounty.gov/eaton-fire. They will be updated daily in real time.
Altadena resident Zaire Calvin, who is on the football staff at Oaks Christian School in Westlake Village, lost his home, as did his mother, and his 59-year-old sister died in the blaze.
“It’s been hard processing all this and crying every day, just wanting to go home,” he told KTLA.
“I don’t even know how to talk about it ‘cuz it’s just so much that she couldn’t get out and that part, it replays in my head like a bad nightmare, over and over again, to try to understand what she was thinking and why she wouldn’t and why she didn’t … It’s just too much to handle or bear, to try to understand.”
He implored his fellow Altadena residents, “Do not sell, please. Keep your homes. Fight for everything. Let’s stick together and … hopefully God will make a way.”
There were 3,392 personnel assigned to the firefighting effort, with the U.S. Forest Service, Los Angeles County Fire Department, Pasadena Fire Department, Arcadia Fire Department, Sierra Madre Fire Department, Pasadena Police Department and Los Angeles County Sheriff’s Department working under a unified command.
Six firefighters have suffered undisclosed injuries fighting the blaze, according to the county fire department.
SoCalGas officials said they had temporarily shut off natural gas service to 16,700 customers Saturday in the Pasadena, Altadena and Sierra Madre communities. As of Tuesday afternoon, the utility had restored service to 366 of those customers. The Gas Co. has established an information booth for residents at the Santa Anita Mall, Gate 8, at 400 S. Baldwin Ave. in Arcadia to provide information for customers.
An evacuation center was set up at the Pasadena Convention Center at 300 E. Green St. The Humane Society is on-site to accept small pets for boarding. Small animals were also being accepted at Baldwin Park Animal Care Center at 4275 Elton St., while large animals were accepted at Industry Hills Expo Center at 16200 Temple Ave., city of Industry.
A curfew was in effect nightly from 6 p.m. to 6 a.m. in the mandatory evacuation areas, with only firefighters, law enforcement and utility workers allowed in those zones. Luna said Monday more than 30 people had been arrested in both the Eaton and Palisades burn areas, some for alleged looting and others for offenses including narcotics or weapons possession. Two people were arrested for allegedly operating a drone in the area.
The Pasadena Unified School District, which includes Altadena, closed its campuses until at least Friday. The Glendale Unified School District announced its schools reopened Monday with the exception of Rosemont Middle School, where a tree fell on campus.
While nearly all schools outside of evacuation zones in the Los Angeles Unified School District reopened Monday, all schools in the La Cañada Unified School District remained closed Monday. That district reopened Tuesday.
Pasadena City College also reopened Monday.
The entire Angeles National Forest has been closed for public safety and the protection of natural resources through at least Sunday.
The Huntington Library, Art Museum, and Botanical Gardens was closed at least through Tuesday.
A few miles to the east, Santa Anita Park in Arcadia canceled racing over the weekend due to the ongoing wildfires. Morning training continued as scheduled and the track remained open for satellite wagering.
The track property was being used to support several relief efforts, including a large charity drop-off that had been established at the Rose Bowl and relocated to Santa Anita Park’s south parking lot Friday afternoon. Thousands of people flooded the parking lot over the weekend with supplies, prompting officials to announce they no longer needed clothing or shoes.
Southern California Edison was using the entire north parking lot as its base camp to restore power to those in the affected areas. Santa Anita Park was working with additional response organizations that have requested space.
The Eaton Fire was reported about 6:20 p.m. Jan. 7 in the area of Altadena Drive and Midwick Drive in the hills above Altadena amid hurricane force Santa Ana winds, according to Cal Fire. The cause of the fire has not been determined.
Among the structures destroyed in the fire was the Pasadena Jewish Temple & Center. The Los Angeles County Department of Parks and Recreation reported that the Eaton Canyon Nature Center, Farnsworth Park’s Davies Community Center — listed on the National Register of Historic Places — the Altadena Golf Course Club House and adjacent buildings were also destroyed. Also destroyed was The Bunny Museum in Altadena.
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