Advertisement

Final evacuation order officially lifted nearly six months after Palisades fire

Debris is cleared in April 2025 from the ruins of a home on De Pauw Street in Pacific Palisades.
(Genaro Molina / Los Angeles Times)

More than five months after a wildfire devastated Pacific Palisades, the final evacuation orders have been fully lifted, according to the Los Angeles Fire Department.

A portion of the coastal Los Angeles neighborhood had remained under an evacuation order because of dangerous downed wires, potentially explosive lithium-ion batteries and toxic wildfire debris, said Lyndsey Lantz, a spokesperson for the Fire Department.

The Army Corps of Engineers, the lead agency overseeing wildfire cleanup, has overseen federal contractors in clearing wreckage away from more than 3,200 properties, alleviating some of those worries.

Advertisement

“Our concern has decreased since much of the debris has been removed,” Lantz said.

Only residents and contractors had previously been able to return to the portion of Pacific Palisades that remained under the evacuation order. Authorities had established vehicle checkpoints, in part, to keep the public away from these lingering hazards.

As the final evacuation orders fully lift, however, the general public will be allowed to access the area. Los Angeles police officers are expected to maintain a presence in the neighborhood to ward off potential thieves and deter property crime.

As federal and state lawmakers call for soil testing after the Eaton and Palisades wildfires, the Newsom administration keeps downplaying contamination concerns.

Although people will be allowed back into fire-affected communities, public safety and health authorities are asking them to exercise caution, such as wearing an N-95 mask to prevent exposure to toxic dust.

Advertisement

Elected officials and environmental researchers have raised serious concerns about the possibility of lingering soil contamination because federal disaster agencies have decided not to pay for soil testing to confirm that heavy contamination isn’t left behind.

Soil sampling projects by Los Angeles Times journalists and, separately, the Los Angeles County Department of Public Health found lead and arsenic contamination above California’s standards for residential properties at sites already cleaned by federal contractors.

The federal government decided not to test the soil of L.A.’s burn areas for hazardous substances. A Times investigation found high levels of lead and other heavy metals.

Advertisement
Advertisement