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Altadena residents whose homes survived the Eaton Fire said they still can’t return home three months in. Their fear? A materials recycling operation at the Altadena Golf Course.
Altadena residents are protesting the use of the Altadena Golf Course as a debris recycling site as cleanup continues in the Eaton Fire burn zone. Despite reassurance from the U.S. Army Corps of ...
metal and tree limbs from burned out properties to a new processing facility within Los Angeles County’s Altadena Golf Course. The Army Corps of Engineers began its first day of a 10-month operation ...
Crews are continuing their work at the Altadena Golf Course to crush concrete from homes affected by the Eaton Fire, assuring residents they're taking precautions with public health and safety in ...
Nonetheless, some residents have complained about transparency and the selection of the Altadena Golf Course as a temporary debris staging area.
The U.S. Army Corps of Engineers provided an optimistic timeline for when most destroyed properties in Altadena could be cleared.
After the Eaton fire tore through Altadena, a widely shared belief emerged that the town’s 115-year-old golf course protected most of the homes around it because the flames couldn't cross the ...
In response to growing concerns about air quality following the Eaton Fire, several monitoring efforts have been established in Altadena and Pasadena to provide ...
Recyclable concrete, metal and trees, on the other hand, are sent to separation sites in Temescal Canyon and the Altadena Golf Course. Metal gets separated out and sent to recyclers in Irwindale ...
While 80% is likely to head to landfills, concrete, metal and trees are heading to sites like the Altadena Golf Course for sorting before being recycled. Residents are worried: Concrete is being ...
Last week the army corps began operating a debris recycling site at the Altadena Golf Course. Avichal said that the site is now processing between 100 to 150 trucks worth of material on a daily basis.