The scale of the destruction is hard to comprehend: The fires have consumed more the 60 square miles, according to state fire officials, and killed at least 24 people even as the search for additional victims remains ongoing.
Loren Benn grew up in Altadena, California. The Eaton Fire burned more than a dozen homes belonging to her family members.
Madison Greene from Boston and now living in California gives CBS News Boston Assignment Manager Joe Couture a firsthand account of the wildfires in California.
BOSTON - They were exhausted, both physically and emotionally, as they waited for their luggage on Wednesday night. Hundreds of passengers landed in Boston after evacuating the deadly wildfires in ...
It’s frustrating at every level of government,” said Democratic state Senator Henry Stern, who was part of a group of lawmakers who authored the legislation. “I feel like a failure on it, being quite frank.
The fallout from the Southern California wildfires has one Boston-based nonprofit expediting the services it offers to families affected by a parent who lost their life to breast cancer or was diagnosed with metastatic breast cancer,
As wildfires continue to burn and cause destruction in California, restaurants in Boston are offering ways to help victims. A portion of the proceeds from each cocktail sold will go to the ...
Boston Scientific Corp. is paying $443 million upfront, plus up to $221 million in possible milestones, to buy the remainder of a Carlsbad, California company in which it already owned a major stake.
Between the two biggest LA fires, more than 36,000 acres have burned. The entire city of Boston is just over 31,000 acres.
Two South Boston natives, now Los Angeles firefighters, are battling relentless wildfires, witnessing homes destroyed and facing challenges with wind-driven flames.
The fires in California have burned 62 square miles ... Simmons, a Massachusetts native and long established Boston sports fan and columnist, has been living in L.A. since 2002, and Iacono ...
Hundreds of passengers landed in Boston after evacuating the deadly wildfires in Los Angeles. "It really feels like the apocalypse," said Laurie David. "I can count five friends now whose homes are gone,