Trending Topics

Multiple burn victims reported as thousands flee wind-driven L.A. wildfire

The Los Angeles Fire Department said a firefighter was among those injured, suffering a serious head injury during the Palisades Fire

LOS ANGELES — At least one firefighter and several others were injured in the wind-driven Palisades Fire.

The fire, which started around 10:30 a.m. on Jan. 7, rapidly grew to nearly 3,000 acres by evening and continued spreading due to strong Santa Ana winds.

Fire officials said several people were injured, with some seeking shelter at Duke’s Malibu on Pacific Coast Highway and multiple burn victims reported near Big Rock, KTLA reported.

“We don’t know how many patients there are yet, but they’re saying there are multiple burn patients, some face injuries and some hand injuries,” an official said.

A 25-year-old female firefighter suffered a serious head injury, according to LAFD PIO Erik Scott.

The Associated Press reported the fire spread so quickly that staff at a senior living center had to wheel dozens of residents, some in hospital beds, down the street to a parking lot.

One resident, aged 102, waited alongside others in bedclothes under a glowing red sky as embers fell, until ambulances, buses and construction vans arrived to transport them to safety.

A traffic jam on Palisades Drive blocked emergency vehicles until a bulldozer cleared abandoned cars to create a path.

Trending
Pilot and copilot killed after an Air Canada regional jet struck a fire truck crossing a runway at New York’s LaGuardia Airport
With response times exceeding 9 – 25 minutes in some rural areas, lawmakers are backing a bill to create a public EMS dashboard to improve transparency and guide resource allocation
Police are treating the fire that damaged four ambulances belonging to a Jewish volunteer organization in London as an antisemitic hate crime
Staten Island’s response times have declined over the past decade as rising call volume and staffing shortages slow advanced and basic life support responses

Bill Carey is the associate editor for FireRescue1.com and EMS1.com. A former Maryland volunteer firefighter, sergeant, and lieutenant, Bill has written for several fire service publications and platforms. His work on firefighter behavioral health garnered a 2014 Neal Award nomination. His ongoing research and writings about line-of-duty death data is frequently cited in articles, presentations, and trainings. Have a news tip? He can be reached at news@lexipol.com.