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Final evacuation orders lifted as Palisades Fire nears full containment

Final evacuation orders lifted as Palisades Fire nears full containmentPhoto by Mario Tama/Getty Images
January 27, 2025
City News - LA Post

With the burn area nearly fully contained, the final evacuation orders stemming from the deadly Palisades Fire were lifted Monday, allowing residents only to return to their properties.

The orders for the final two neighborhoods within the city of Los Angeles portion of the fire area were lifted shortly after noon Monday. Only residents will be permitted into any of the repopulated areas.

Fire officials said residents will no longer need escorts into the area, but they must obtain an access pass by checking in with law enforcement at the Lot 3 Beach Access, 1150 Pacific Coast Highway in Santa Monica.

County public health officials are distributing personal protective equipment to residents returning to their homes.

Nightly curfew orders remain in effect, barring any unauthorized people from entering the fire areas.

The sheriff's department and other law enforcement agencies have reported dozens of arrests for alleged looting, burglaries and curfew violations since the fires in ignited in Altadena and the Palisades, the latter of which started around 10:30 a.m. Jan. 7 in the area of Piedra Morada and Monte Hermoso drives as the area was under a red flag warning for critical fire danger due to a historic wind event that saw gusts of 80 to 100 mph.

The Palisades Fire scorched 23,448 acres and killed at least 11 people. As of Sunday, 6,837 structures had been destroyed by the blaze, and another 1,017 damaged. One firefighter was injured, along with three civilians, according to fire officials.

Rain that fell over the weekend raised concerns about mud and debris flows, and some roads were blocked Monday due to small slides.

The Santa Monica-Malibu Unified School District closed its four Malibu schools Monday due to dangerous road conditions and challenges with access to schools. Those schools are Malibu and Webster elementary schools, Malibu Middle School and Malibu High School.

The L.A. Department of Water and Power has reported that many customers are without power in the Pacific Palisades area, mainly in areas where workers cannot safely access homes or in areas where it is unsafe to re- energize power lines. Customers with questions about the status of their service can call 800-342-5397.

Southern California Gas Co. had shut off service to about 13,600 customers in the Palisades Fire area for safety reasons, but the utility reported Monday that it has restored service for 5,284 of those customers.

A FEMA Disaster Recovery Center is operating at UCLA Research Park West, 10850 Pico Blvd., to provide information for residents. Mayor Karen Bass said Monday that residents from 4,000 households have already sought assistance at the center.

L.A. County officials said its damage assessments can be viewed at recovery.lacounty.gov/palisades-fire. They will be updated daily in real time.

The L.A. County Office of Medical Examiner has positively identified 18 of the 28 people confirmed dead in the Palisades and Eaton wildfires. The list can be found at me.lacounty.gov/2025/press- releases/wildfire-update-18-victims-identified-by-medical- examiner/?utm_content=&utm_medium=email&utm_name=&utm_source=govdelivery&utm_te rm=.

President Donald Trump visited Pacific Palisades on Friday, touring a neighborhood with representatives of the L.A. Fire Department and three area residents and vowing to "open the coffers" of the federal government and waive federal permits to expedite the rebuilding process.

"I don't think you can realize how rough it is, how devastating it is until you see it," Trump said of the fire damage during a sometimes contentious public briefing with local officials. "I didn't realize. I saw a lot of bad things on television, but the extent of it, the size of it. We flew over it ... it is devastation. It's incredible, it's really an incineration. Even some of the chimneys came down. When you have chimneys come down you know that's pretty hot stuff and a lot of them were down."

Trump assured them that "the federal government is standing behind you 100%." He noted that the fires are "already the most expensive natural disaster, they say, in American history. That's pretty amazing."

Trump vowed to "essentially waive all federal permits," noting that the permitting process can often hold up projects for 10 years, and he asked local authorities for assurances that local permitting also be expedited or waived -- something Bass assured Trump was already being done.

The cause of the fire remains under investigation.

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