The Eaton fire ignited about 6:30 p.m. on Jan. 7 in Eaton Canyon and burned 14,021 acres before firefighters contained the ...
Edison generates billions of dollars in revenue every year and has a history of passing along the costs of disasters to ...
Southern California Edison was warned in 2022 that an emergency shutdown could overload power lines that run through Eaton ...
Ramin Yazid, who is rebuilding his home destroyed in 2022, knows the problems and pitfalls that victims in Altadena and ...
Days after the Eaton Fire in Los Angeles first ignited, firefighters observed that power lines operated by Southern ...
An attorney who is suing Southern California Edison was in court, attempting to ensure that none of the equipment that ...
First responder communications show the power company in Altadena was slow to respond to Eaton firefighters — and that live ...
The answer will hinge on whether state agencies determine Edison's equipment ignited the deadly Eaton fire that destroyed a huge swath of Altadena in the foothills north of Los Angeles.
One lawyer claims to have "clear-cut" evidence that Southern California Edison's equipment is to blame for the Eaton Fire. SoCal Edison says it's still too early to tell.
On Jan. 19, almost two weeks after the Eaton fire broke out near Altadena, Calif., technicians for Southern California Edison began testing electrical equipment near the origin of the blaze.
Minutes after 6 p.m., witnesses spotted a fire under an Edison transmission tower in Eaton Canyon. Since then, there has been intense scrutiny from both investigators and experts about whether ...