The combination of powerful winds and potential power outages has many people living across the Inland Empire living on edge, especially after witnessing the sheer force of the two devastating wildfires that continue to burn in Los Angeles County to the north.
Southern California’s industrial market is the largest in the U.S., thanks in no small part to incredible demand and activity during the COVID-19 pandemic when dramatic surges in e-commerce demand began to take hold. But trends in the past couple of years are bringing that fervor back down to Earth.
As high wind warnings remain in place throughout the Inland Empire, many residents are feeling frustrated after days without electricity. Southern California Edison has intermittently shut off power in areas the company has identified as having heightened wildfire risks,
The National Weather Service has issued a fire weather watch for the Inland Empire and surrounding areas as a Red Flag Warning remains in effect.
With Southern California still reeling from the disastrous wildfires, the Inland Empire communities are bracing for strong winds fanning flames. Joy Benedict reports.
As two wind-driven and deadly wildfires continue to rip through the Los Angeles basin, Inland Empire residents — no strangers to the devastation of wildfire — are working to help support victims of the Palisades and Eaton fires.
Another wave of Santa Ana winds arrive Saturday, likely generating gusts over 40 mph throughout the Inland Empire going into Sunday.
New bills would void the new fuel standards, remove taxes from tips and bolster investigations of missing or killed Indigenous people.
Miramar Capital has bought a 332,700-square-foot industrial campus in the Inland Empire for $86 million. The Sawtelle-based investor purchased the three-building Serrano Industrial Park at 4350, 4388 and 4420 Serrano Drive, in Jurupa Valley, the Commercial Observer reported. The seller was PreZero, a locally based recycling firm.
The healthy rate of industrial investment activity in Southern California’s Inland Empire to start the new year continues with the sale of a three-building complex in the region’s Jurupa Valley.
David Lynch, the prolific artist and filmmaker who created the television show “Twin Peaks,” died Thursday, four days before his 79th birthday. His early childhood in the Inland Northwest left a lasting impression on his psyche.
Unlike typical wildfires, smoke from the L.A. fires — consisting of toxic materials from burned down homes, cars, and more — poses additional risks to public health.