With wildfires increasing year after year, more homeowners are thinking about the future of their houses — and whether they have a future at all as the climate rapidly changes.
The Los Angeles wildfires recently showed people around the world that celebrity or not, no one is safe from fire.
A deep dive into how RGS’s B4b model is transforming industry collaboration, delivering innovative solutions, and driving ...
After the devastation of the Los Angeles fires, officials are ready to rebuild. But defending against future fires requires ...
Susan and Winston Salser, both in their 80s, refused to evacuate from their Pacific Palisades home despite being surrounded ...
A third of American homes, or about 48 million properties, are at risk of wildfires. Here's how to protect yours.
Wildfires are a fact of life in California. They’re a natural phenomenon, clearing decaying vegetation, restoring nutrients ...
Since then, ships have been required to carry sufficient lifeboats for all passengers. Apparently lifeboats and lifeboat drills do not instill panic and fear as more and more people take cruises. The ...
In Pacific Palisades, part of the fire danger came from the fact that homes were densely packed together. If the home next ...
After the Great Fire of 1666 the City of London banned straw thatched roofs. Almost all the houses lost in Los Angeles (FT ...
Facing the uncertainties of droughts, wildfires, blackouts, poor air quality, mudslides and flooding, here are some ideas ...
SWANNANOA, N.C. — (AP) — President Donald Trump said he was considering "getting rid of" the Federal Emergency Management ...