One after another, the million-gallon tanks firefighters tapped into to douse the deadly Los Angeles wildfires went dry, leaving them without enough water to fight the flames, officials said ...
said workers had filled all 114 of the city’s water storage tanks before the fires ignited. The agency responded to the water shortages by deploying trucks carrying up to 4,000 gallons of water to ...
There are misconceptions circulating about who’s at fault for the fires burning tens of thousands of acres across Los Angeles ...
Water experts dismissed Trump’s claims that California water policy is to blame for dry hydrants. But Los Angeles is also unprepared for the age of urban wildfires.
The shortage in the Pacific Palisades happened, Quiñones said at an earlier news conference (time stamp 52:17), because the three, full, million-gallon tanks ... 4,000 gallons each were ferrying ...
Crews battling multiple wildfires that raged across Los Angeles on Wednesday were up against a near-perfect storm: intense ...
While battling the huge wildfires in L.A., many firefighters suddenly found they had lost access to a crucial firefighting ...
Firefighters in Pacific Palisades and Altadena have repeatedly been hampered by low water pressure and dry hydrants, ...
Hydrogen-powered trucks are making waves in the world of clean transportation, and the H2Rescue truck just set a new Guinness ...
TANKS FILLED IN ADVANCE The Los Angeles Department ... The department urged Angelenos to conserve water, and said it had deployed 18 water trucks of 2,000 to 4,000 gallons since Tuesday to help ...
Janisse Quiñones, chief executive officer and chief engineer of the Los Angeles Department of Water and Power, couldn't quite explain why fire hydrants have run dry in bumbling video.