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In PACIFIC PALISADES, Calif., a year has passed since two significant wildfires ravaged different parts of Los Angeles County, yet the journey to recovery for countless families is still ongoing.
The fires ignited within hours of each other, wreaking havoc for a month. They claimed 31 lives and reduced over 16,000 buildings to ashes throughout the county. In the Pacific Palisades and neighboring Malibu, the flames raged for 31 days, devastating 37 square miles and obliterating more than 6,000 structures, predominantly homes. Meanwhile, the Eaton Fire in Altadena alone accounted for the destruction of over 9,000 buildings.
Currently, many individuals impacted by the fires are still entangled in bureaucratic processes, awaiting rebuilding permits. Others face challenges such as contaminated land, ongoing displacement, and the painstakingly slow march back to a semblance of normalcy.
“I’ve been finding silver linings throughout the day,” shared Nicole Gyarmathy, who has revisited the vicinity of her previous home to plant flowers a year after the disaster.
“I’m doing everything I can to restore health and the essence of what was here before. Whether it’s planting flowers and trees or clearing away debris,” Gyarmathy expressed.

Burned homes are reduced to skeletal outlines days after the Palisades Fire swept through the Pacific Palisades neighborhood of Los Angeles. (FOX News )
For her, the small acts help process loss and offer hope to others returning to empty lots.
“People are coming up here to visit their lots that are empty,” she said. “They see that, and it just brings them hope that, ‘Oh yeah, no, we’re not being left behind.’”
Across the Palisades, recovery has been uneven. On the anniversary of the fire, residents marked the moment with protests and memorials, underscoring lingering anger and frustration.

A protest sign calling for the resignation of Los Angeles Mayor Karen Bass appears on a bulldozed lawn one year since the wildfires. (FOX News )
Ken Ehrlich, an environmental lawyer who lost his home in the fire, said he remembers arriving to find only remnants of what once stood.
“We pulled up right on Sunset… hysterically crying and screaming at the site of our still smoldering property with only the chimney standing,” Ehrlich said. “I literally screamed that we need to get out of here right now.”
Ehrlich’s property is now nearing construction after months of uncertainty. According to a December Los Angeles Times analysis, fewer than 14 percent of homes destroyed in the Palisades have received permits to rebuild. Even some homes that remain standing are unlivable due to smoke, ash and asbestos contamination.

A sandbag rests on a construction site as homeowners begin rebuilding in the Pacific Palisades. (FOX News )
“The threat is real… it’s a big problem,” Ehrlich said. “I mean, people are dealing with it all over the place.”
Still, a piece of heavy machinery now sits on his lot, a sign that rebuilding is finally underway.
“I’m really excited to move forward and build,” Ehrlich said. “I want to come back to the neighborhood. It’s who we are, and I don’t want to go anywhere else.”
“My hope is standing here,” he added. “My hope is wanting to come back to my home, wanting my family to come back, looking to the future, and really wanting the Palisades to come back better and stronger than it was before.”
Across the county in Altadena, the Eaton Fire unfolded under extreme conditions. Crews were already stretched thin battling the Palisades fire when 90-mile-per-hour winds grounded aircraft and caused the blaze to explode.
Brian Childs stood on his cleared property this week, where no house and no debris remain… just land, quiet and waiting.
“It’s all you see, it’s black smoke going about 100 miles an hour and flames all around you,” Childs said of the night the fire began.
His home stood for most of the evening before it was suddenly gone.
“I sat right down across the street for about 15 minutes, called my wife and said, it’s gone,” Childs said. “And she was devastated.”
According to city and county data, just 10 homes have been rebuilt in Altadena so far. Childs hopes his will be next. His plans are complete, and permits are moving forward.
“This is part of my family’s legacy,” he said. “I want to be able to leave this to my kids, and hopefully their kids.”
Though not everyone in Altadena has that option. Many of those who lost homes were renters, and some are displaced a year later.
“The housing need remains deeply, deeply urgent,” said Palin Ngaotheppitak. “We still see applications every day, from folks who are living in their cars a year after the fire.”
Beacon Housing, a local nonprofit, is building long-term housing for low-income fire survivors.
Ngaotheppitak ran from the fire with her children last year and is still awaiting progress on her own home, but says helping others is essential to the community’s recovery.
“I think it’s even more important for a place like Altadena where the community ties are so strong,” she said. “We’re really looking out for our neighbors here. We are in this together.”