N​early 75% of the country is at risk for a potentially damaging earthquake, according to a recently updated USGS map.
For the Valley 31 years later, the 1994 Northridge earthquake was a defining moment, testing the resilience of its residents and the strength of its community institutions.
As government moves to recovery mode in the wake of the devastating fires, the anniversary of one of L.A.’s worst disasters ...
Anniversaries Pass, Trauma Remains By Elizabeth Vera Even as the wildfires of California continue, having affected an estimated 200,000 residents and resulted in 27 deaths, the memory of the ...
A 6.7 magnitude earthquake woke Angelenos at 4:30 in the morning on January 17th, 1994. Called the Northridge Earthquake, it killed fifty-seven people and caused between $20 and $40 billion worth ...
Now, however, the FAIR Plan is facing its biggest crisis since the 1994 Northridge earthquake, when it was bailed out by the ...
When these fires finally end, the long road to recovery begins. The last time Los Angeles faced such an enormous challenge was after the Northridge earthquake in 1994. Zev Yaroslavsky was an L.A. city ...
At exactly 4:30:55 a.m. on Jan. 17, 1994, Los Angeles was rocked by a magnitude 6.7 earthquake that caused catastrophic damage, particularly near the epicenter in the San Fernando Valley.
Thirty-one years ago this week, Riordan put it to good use, and it echoes on the anniversary of the Northridge earthquake as a kind of playbook — lessons learned amid the city of L.A.’s and ...