January 7, 2025: Los Angeles wildfires race through Pacific Palisades, Sylmar, Eaton Canyon | CNN

Los Angeles County wildfires updates

still_21250132_3388611.6010000003_still.jpg
‘This is only going to get worse’: Nick Watt reports on the scene as Los Angeles wildfire grows
02:58 - Source: CNN

What we covered here

• Tens of thousands of people have been told to evacuate as a fast-growing fire destroys homes in the Pacific Palisades in Los Angeles. Many were forced to abandon cars in the seaside neighborhood sandwiched between Malibu and Santa Monica, which have also issued evacuation orders. With traffic slowing evacuations, and flames jumping the highway, some considered sheltering on the beach.

• The out-of-control Palisades fire is blazing through about five football fields a minute and has burned more than 2,900 acres. Los Angeles has declared an emergency and officials warned that the worst is yet to come as “tornado-like” winds complicate firefighters’ battles.

• Two other fires have erupted in Los Angeles County: The 100-acre strong Hurst fire north of San Fernando, and the Eaton fire in Altadena, which has grown to 1,000 acres in a matter of hours. At a Pasadena senior care home, workers raced to evacuate residents with the Eaton blaze just a block away. More than 200,000 homes and buildings are without power in the county.

83 Posts

Our live coverage of the Los Angeles County wildfires has moved here.

All Malibu residents told to prepare to evacuate even if they're not under an order

All residents in Malibu not under evacuation orders have been told to prepare for evacuation anyway, with the city warning that it was a “critical time to prepare for the unpredictable and rapidly changing nature of the fire.”

Those who need additional time to evacuate, or who have pets or livestock, should consider preparing to leave now, the city said in an update on its website just before midnight Tuesday.

It urged residents to relocate northwest toward Oxnard if they had a safe location to go outside Malibu, saying early evacuations could help avoid traffic congestion or delays if an order is later issued.

Evacuees can head to these three shelters:

  • Westwood Recreation Center
  • Pasadena Convention Center
  • El Camino Real Charter High School

Those with animals can head to these shelters:

  • Agoura Animal Care Center (small animals)
  • LA Equestrian Center (large animals)
  • Pierce College Equestrian Center (large animals)

Drivers abandon vehicles on Sunset, Topanga Canyon, Pacific Coast Highway to escape blaze

A police officer stands next to a vehicle Pacific Coast Highway as a wildfire burns in the Pacific Palisades neighborhood of west Los Angeles, California, on January 7.

Drivers began abandoning their cars across Los Angeles’ main roadways early Tuesday after authorities told people to clear the roads as the Palisades fire grew closer.

On Sunset Boulevard, drivers were told by fire officials to get our of their cars and escape the fast-approaching blaze by foot. The fire department later reported 30 vehicles that were abandoned on Sunset that would be bulldozed to make way for first responders, according to CNN affiliate KCAL.

“The fire came right down to the road and the fire department came up and said get out of your cars now — because the fire was right up against the cars,” Marsha Horowitz, who was driving down Sunset at the time, told KCAL.

“There were three lanes of cars, and the fire was right down and there was nothing to stop it.”

Another driver on Sunset said that she witnessed fire all around her as fire officials approached her to leave her car.

All highway lanes near Topanga Canyon Boulevard closed after the wildfire expanded to 200 acres on Tuesday morning, while part of the Pacific Coast Highway in Malibu experienced a traffic gridlock before authorities told drivers to leave their cars.

Adam Handler and his wife were among those trying to evacuate when they received a chilling warning from law enforcement authorities, according to CNN affiliate KNBC.

Fire breaks out in Santa Paula, Ventura County

Structures and vehicles are on fire in Santa Paula, in the Santa Clara River Valley between Los Angeles and Santa Barbara, according to the Ventura County Fire Department.

Videos posted by the department show smoke and embers flying in the strong wind, with fire crews handling multiple hoses.

It was not immediately clear whether the fire was linked to the wildfires in Los Angeles County.

"The smoke was unbearable," Pasadena evacuee tells CNN

Flames in Pasadena viewed from the home of Bobbie Oliver during the fire.

As she evacuated from her home, Pasadena resident Bobbie Oliver sent CNN photos and videos.

“The smoke was unbearable even with windows closed,” Oliver told CNN. “We could see the fire and our house was full of smoke. Then a cop car went around saying evacuate now in a bullhorn,” she added.

Oliver was able to grab her two dogs, laptops and passports along with some of her father’s artwork before leaving.

“It was frantic and downed trees and branches all in the streets,” she said about the evacuation. In one video she sent to CNN, police cars and strong winds can be heard.

Eaton fire expands to 1,000 acres, just six hours after it began

The Eaton fire, located in Altadena north of Pasadena, has rapidly grown to cover 1,000 acres – just six hours after it began burning.

Like the other two blazes burning in the area – the massive Palisades fire and the newly erupted Hurst fire – the Eaton fire is at 0% containment, according to fire officials.

Firefighters have been battling the blazes since Tuesday afternoon, warning earlier in the day that extreme wind conditions would only get worse overnight – with fire crews now in the thick of it, at shortly after midnight in California.

With no hope of containment tonight, firefighters are focusing on saving lives

Elderly patients are quickly evacuated into emergency vehicles as embers and flames approach during the Eaton fire in Pasadena, California, on January 7.

There is no possibility of containing the Los Angeles fires tonight, and firefighters are focusing on saving lives instead, said David Acuna, the public information officer with CAL Fire and a battalion chief.

Asked by CNN if there was “any hope of possibility of containment of these fires, given the high winds” Acuna replied: “No. Honestly, there’s not.”

Acuna said strong wind meant the fires continued to expand.

Evacuation orders issued north of Sylmar and San Fernando as Hurst fire spreads "rapidly"

The Hurst fire, which began around 10:30 p.m. in the Sylmar neighborhood just above San Fernando, is “spreading rapidly under high winds, creating dangerous conditions for nearby communities,” according to state fire department CAL Fire.

An evacuation order was issued for the area north of the Interstate 210, sitting just north of Sylmar, while evacuation warnings have been issued for parts of the Granada Hills North neighborhood southwest of the highway.

The fire is about 100 acres big.

Eaton fire grows to 600 acres, as two other blazes burn elsewhere

The Eaton fire in Altadena has grown to 600 acres, according to CAL Fire, the state’s fire department – an increase from 400 acres from just three hours ago. And less than an hour before that, it was only at 100 acres, showing just how quickly the blaze has exploded.

Elsewhere in LA County, the huge Palisades fire is still burning near Santa Monica, measuring more than 2,900 acres. A new, third fire has erupted north of San Fernando, with the Hurst Fire at 100 acres big.

Here are the evacuation centers that have been set up so far, according to CAL Fire:

  • El Camino Real Charter High School
  • Pasadena Convention Center
  • Westwood Recreation Center

Drought and climate change exacerbating conditions for rapid wildfire growth

California has experienced a stark contrast in weather between regions, with significantly above-average rainfall across Northern California, while some parts of Southern California haven’t seen over a quarter of an inch of rainfall since early July.

A series of atmospheric rivers and atmospheric river-fueled storms have barraged Northern California and the Pacific Northwest, bringing significant precipitation. This has brought rainfall amounts to as much as 200% above normal across Northern California since October 1.

The opposite is the truth for Southern California, which has seen Santa Ana wind events and below average rainfall over the past three months. On October 1, none of Los Angeles County was under drought conditions, but according to the latest drought numbers, which came out on January 1, over 83% of the county is in a moderate drought.

On October 1, only 10% of the California as a whole was under any sort of drought conditions, the majority occurring across southeastern California. Fast forward to the latest drought numbers, over 30% of the state is experiencing some sort of drought conditions, with the majority of this occurring across Southern California. Little relief is in store for Southern California, with the Climate Prediction Center calling for below-average rainfall chances for the month of January.

The role of climate change: Wildfires are fueled by a knot of factors, both natural and human-caused, but scientists say that global warming is loading the dice in favor of more intense and severe blazes.

Hotter temperatures are the clearest climate change-fueled contributor to wildfires. Heat sucks the moisture from vegetation making it much more combustible. “Drier fuels are a critical part of fire, the drier the fuel the easier it is to start a fire,” Mike Flannigan, professor of wildland fire at the University of Alberta, told CNN in March.

CNN’s Laura Paddison contributed reporting.

Palisades fire remains at 0% containment

The Pacific Palisades fire is burning at 0% containment at 2,921 acres, the Los Angeles County Fire Department wrote in a post on X late Tuesday.

Two videos attached to the post show fires violently searing upwards through trees, with branches charred and bare.

image001.png
Palisades fire tears through Southern California
00:24 - Source: CNN

Celebrities evacuate as Palisades fire rips through their neighborhoods

Firefighters walk by a home on flames during a powerful windstorm on January 8, in the Pacific Palisades neighborhood of Los Angeles, California.

Several celebrities have been affected by the Palisades fire, which blazed through the affluent Pacific Palisades neighborhood in the Santa Monica mountains.

Actor Eugene Levy, most recently known for his role in “Schitt’s Creek,” told the Los Angeles Times that he got stuck while evacuating. “The smoke looked pretty black and intense over Temescal Canyon,” he said. “I couldn’t see any flames but the smoke was very dark.”

Actor James Woods shared videos of the fire engulfing a house two doors down from him, later saying he had evacuated the area. “I do not know at this moment if our home is still standing, but sadly houses on our little street are not,” he wrote on X, adding that his family had renovated a home after the pandemic and just finished last month.

Actor Steve Guttenberg helped fire crews by trying to move some abandoned cars from the road, telling CNN he’d never seen anything like it in his life. By the time he evacuated in the early evening, burning trees were falling on Sunset Boulevard, and iconic buildings like the Pierson Playhouse, part of the Theatre Palisades.

Golden State Warriors coach Steve Kerr said his mother was forced to flee the Palisades and that team staff member Everett Dayton’s family home had been lost. “Everything I’m seeing and reading is just terrifying,” he said in a news conference shared on X.

Los Angeles Lakers coach JJ Redick said that his family, his wife’s family along with her twin sister’s family have all been evacuated from the Palisades fire. “I just want to acknowledge and send thoughts and prayers to everyone in the Palisades right now,” Redick said before the Lakers’ game against the Mavericks in Dallas, the Associated Press reported. “That’s where I live.”

About the neighborhood: The coastal community has long been popular among celebrities, including Tom Hanks and Rita Wilson. It’s also home to the famous Getty Villa, a museum that houses a variety of relics from Greece and Rome, which said Tuesday night it was safe from the fire.

Third fire erupts in Sylmar, near San Fernando

A third blaze, the Hurst fire, has erupted in the Sylmar neighborhood just northwest of San Fernando, according to CAL Fire, the state’s fire department.

The fire has burned through 100 acres, with an immediate evacuation order issued for the area north of the 210 Freeway from Roxford to the Interstate 5-state Route 14 split, also known as the Newhall Pass interchange.

The fire is located between the Palisades and Eaton fires, at a more northern latitude.

Fires visible from planes flying over Los Angeles County

Shelby Kidman, who was onboard a flight as it traveled over the Palisades fire, filmed the blaze from above.

She told CNN the video was taken as her flight from Salt Lake City approached Los Angeles International Airport.

Watch the fires raging beneath the plane:

ugc_plane.jpg
Video from onboard a flight shows the Palisades fire raging below
00:06 - Source: CNN

Elderly residents evacuated with no shoes on as fires race across Los Angeles County. Here's what to know

A man leaves following an evacuation order as a wildfire burns in the Pacific Palisades neighborhood on January 7.

Burning through five football fields a minute, the Palisades fire has expanded rapidly over the past few hours, destroying homes and prompting evacuation warnings for tens of thousands of people, from Malibu to Santa Monica.

Many were forced to abandon cars in the area that is again at the center of a large blaze following December’s Franklin fire. With traffic slowing evacuations and flames jumping the highway, some had also considered sheltering on the beach.

A separate fire in Los Angeles County, the Eaton fire in Altadena, has doubled in size to 400 acres.

At a Pasadena elderly care home, workers raced to get everybody out safe with Eaton fire just a block away, according to CNN affiliate KCAL. Video shows dozens of residents in wheelchairs, many wearing only thin gowns and covered in shawls on the cold night.

Some didn’t even have shoes, only their socks on, in the rush to leave.

Here’s what you should know:

• Schools close: Five schools in the Los Angeles Unified School District will close on Wednesday, and classes are moving online.

Firefighter injured: A 25-year-old firefighter has sustained a serious head injury. She received treatment at the scene and was sent to hospital, the fire department said.

• Eaton fire doubles: In the space of an hour, the Eaton fire in Altadena has exploded to 400 acres. The Angeles National Forest has urged people in the area to evacuate immediately as high winds are forecast to continue and tens of thousands also flee the Palisades fire. More than 200,000 homes and buildings are without power in the county.

Renowned buildings in flames: A beloved roadside seafood restaurant in Malibu was destroyed by the Palisades fire. The Reel Inn was 36 years old. The Palisades Charter High School, a famed set for films, and nearby elementary school were engulfed by flames.

All equipment used: California Gov. Gavin Newsom said that “hundreds and hundreds of personnel” were responding to the Palisades fire, using airplanes, helicopters, bulldozers and water tenders. The Los Angeles Fire Department is also asking off-duty members to call in to help battle the blaze. But as fire crews battle the Eaton fire north of Pasadena, their fight is limited by having grounded aircraft due to the extreme winds.

Firefighter warnings: Los Angeles County Fire Department Capt. Sheila Kelliher has warned that firefighters are in for a long night, with “tornado-like” winds expected to get worse. Kelliher said the terrain and wind combined created a “massive fight.”

SAG Awards in-person nominations to be canceled, announced online instead

The 31st annual Screen Actors Guild (SAG) Awards nominations announcement, expected to take place live and in-person in Los Angeles on Wednesday night, has been canceled because of the ongoing wildfires.

“Nominees will be unveiled tomorrow at 7:30 a.m. PT via press release and the SAG Awards website,” read a statement from the awards on X.

The official SAG Awards ceremony, to be hosted by actress Kristen Bell this year, will take place on February 23.

"I haven’t seen such extreme fire behavior in a very long time," says LAFD captain

“I haven’t seen such extreme fire behavior in a very long time,” Los Angeles Fire Department Captain Sheila Kelliher told CNN.

“The erratic winds are what’s the story,” said Kelliher, noting that she’s only seen this kind of fire behavior a few times in her 25 years on the job.

Speaking to CNN from inside her car at Rogers Beach, she said that the department is using the roadside parking lot as a “command post” as erratic winds continue to strengthen wildfires that have jumped across roads towards the ocean.

Kelliher described seeing the fire jump toward the beach and burning down two lifeguard towers. The air, she said, seemed to resemble snow or sleet falling with the winds –– except “that’s the ash and that’s the smoke.”

The fire chief emphasized that safety is the department’s priority and that everyone in the fire’s path should heed evacuation orders. “It’s an actual fight. We can win. Some are too far gone,” she said.

Fire officials use bulldozer to move abandoned cars off the road as thousands fled

As tens of thousands of residents fled the Palisades fire on Tuesday, fire officials at one point used a bulldozer to move abandoned vehicles, which had piled up as evacuees became stuck in traffic and decided to flee on foot, off a road.

Videos show the bulldozer scooping up cars and pushing them to the side, with flames and dark smoke visible a short distance away. The sound of metal grinding, glass breaking, car alarms going off and the bulldozer’s roar can be heard.

Officials had to move 30 cars out of the way to clear the road, according to Traffic News Los Angeles.

If you have to abandon a vehicle: “Get it as far off the road as you can so that emergency vehicles get by,” Los Angeles Police Department Chief Jim McDonnell said.

The Palisades Fire ravages a neighbourhood amid high winds in Los Angeles, on January 7, 2025.
Fire officials used a bulldozer to move abandoned vehicles on the roadways as people fled the Palisades Fire
00:49 - Source: CNN

Palisades Charter High School, a famed setting for Hollywood films, is "engulfed in flames," school board member says

As the Palisades fire rips through the Santa Monica mountains and coastal neighborhoods, it has damaged the Palisades Charter High School and nearby elementary school, a school board member told CNN on Tuesday night.

The high school is “currently engulfed in flames,” said Nick Melvoin, a Los Angeles Unified School District board member.

Firefighters are now “working heroically … to preserve the main structures,” but many facilities, including athletic buildings, baseball and tennis courts, and some bungalows, have been “destroyed,” he said.

What to know about the school: The high school was formerly administered by LAUSD but is now an independent charter school, according to its website. The campus may look familiar to many, having been used during the filming of popular shows and films including “Teen Wolf,” “Carrie,” “Freaky Friday” and “American Vandal.”

Melvoin said the school was not in session when the fire broke out, with students still on winter break.

Video shows Eaton fire destroying homes, with wind sending red embers flying into the distance

The Eaton fire, which erupted early Tuesday evening, has ripped through houses and structures in just a few hours and now measures 400 acres in size.

Videos shared by Traffic News Los Angeles show a house going up in a blaze, with the fire crackling loudly. Only the skeleton of the house is still visible, as flames lick at the crumbling beams; seconds later the roof collapses, sending up plumes of dark smoke.

Firefighters can be seen trying to put out the fire, with several hoses deployed. Around them, a fierce wind whips, sending red embers flying into the air and skittering down the road – the exact danger that firefighters warned could cause a blaze to spread quickly over a large area.

Watch the video:

still_21270589_47006_still.jpg
Homes and structures burn as Eaton Fire ignites in Los Angeles County
00:40 - Source: CNN