As we continue to watch the destruction unfold in California from the wildfires, the Florida Forest Service is warning of an increased risk of fires in the Sunshine State.
Insurers are increasingly retreating from high-risk areas, attributing their actions to climate change, even though they have long possessed the tools and expertise to forecast and manage these risks.
A combination of hotter and drier weather and more people living in places that naturally burn are making things complicated.
USA TODAY analysis finds 3.3 million Americans live in areas with "very high" wildfire risk and 14.8 million more at “relatively high” risk.
The American Red Cross South Florida Region sends six volunteers from our area to California to help fire victims pick up the pieces.
But Florida and California have more in common than many might acknowledge, which explains why the devastating wildfires in Los Angeles resonate here in the Sunshine State. The blazes raging ...
Throughout Florida’s history, its ecology has been entangled with fire. “We set good fires, or else we get bad ones,” says Jay Bailey, Sarasota County’s wildfire mitigation officer.
The Florida wildfires of 1998 remain one of the state’s most devastating natural disasters. They highlighted the unique risks posed by Florida’s climate and vegetation, proving that wildfires of catastrophic scale are not confined to the western United States.
The American Red Cross South Florida Region sends six volunteers from our area to California to help fire victims pick up the pieces.
DORAL, Fla. — Speaker Mike Johnson, R-La., suggested Monday that he is open to conditioning California wildfire aid on forcing the state to embrace voter ID laws. President Donald Trump floated the idea on Friday, the same day he visited flame-ravaged Los Angeles.
FLORIDA HAS HAS HOMES FOR SURE. REAL ESTATE AGENT HOLLY MEYER. LUCAS WANTS TO GET THAT MESSAGE OUT TO WILDFIRE VICTIMS IN CALIFORNIA SEEKING REFUGE. WE’VE HAD A BUNCH OF INQUIRIES AND A BUNCH OF ...
But Florida and California have more in common than many might acknowledge, which explains why the devastating wildfires in Los Angeles resonate here in the Sunshine State. The blazes raging across Los Angeles have killed at least 24 people, burned some ...