Local Journalism Happens With YouSupport
Photo Essay

From The Ashes

After the Eaton Canyon Fire devastated Altadena, community care burned brighter than ever

On January 8, 2025, gale-force winds and bone-dry weather created a welcome host for two of the worst natural disasters to ever hit the Los Angeles area.

While the Palisades fire burned in the Santa Monica mountains, the Eaton Canyon Fire ripped through the feet of the San Gabriel Hills and desecrated the neighborhood of Altadena. A predictable tragedy due to climate change and continuous cuts to emergency services budgets, the blaze destroyed thousands of homes, claimed lives, and threw an entire community into disarray. Exacerbated by institutional and governmental neglect, the recovery process has been hard and long for Altadena residents.

The Eaton Canyon Fire is another iteration of natural disaster responses falling along racial lines. The Pacific Palisades, an affluent, predominantly white neighborhood nestled between Santa Monica and Malibu, received outpourings of celebrity support, and the bulk of firefighting resources followed. Given that Altadena, an unincorporated city within LA County, did not have its own fire or emergency services department, it was dependent on the support of neighboring cities.

Much of that never came. The emergency shelter in Pasadena created by the Red Cross became superspreaders for disease. Mistreatment of fire survivors ran rampant as Red Cross staff refused to distribute brand new supplies donated by neighbors and opted instead to give out old, dirty items. Newly donated supplies were kept in the basement, locked away from those who needed them. Red Cross volunteers put evacuees up in one or two week hotel stints as a temporary fix, then refused to let people back into the shelter when their stay had concluded. This left many Altadena residents stranded without refuge.

In scenes reminiscent of Hurricane Katrina 20 years ago, Altadena photographer Mykle Parker captured the scale of the fire’s destruction and something else unexpected: the burning passion of community members, neighbors, mutual aid organizations, and small businesses as they banded together for Altadena. The story of the Eaton Canyon Fire underscores that as natural disasters worsen with climate change, Black and Brown working-class people will bear the brunt of the consequences. It is a cautionary tale that reminds us that environmental justice is a racial justice issue, and that community care triumphs as a healing force in ways that institutions and governments cannot reach.

An Altadena home burns in a burst of flames behind a wooden gate and stone path surrounded by bushes
An Altadena home burns on January 8, 2025. (Photo: Mykle Parker)
Flames smolder amidst rubble in front of a partially constructed building covered in scaffolding
Flames smolder next to a partially constructed building in Altadena. (Photo: Mykle Parker)
The red lights of a firetruck driving down the road towards charred remains of cars and buildings, surrounded by some trees stil standing in front of a smoky sky
Firefighters worked tirelessly amidst charred remains of cars and buildings in the aftermath of the Eaton Canyon Fire. (Photo: Mykle Parker)
Smoke looms over mountains and trees beind a red mural that reads "Greetings from Altadena" with a painted mountains, palm trees, and a bear.
Smoke from the Eaton Canyon Fire looms over a mural on North Lake Ave in Altadena. (Photo: Mykle Parker)
A child’s swing is left hanging in a front yard as the home smolders in front of a yellow smoky sky
A child’s swing is left hanging in a front yard as the home smolders on January 9, 2025. (Photo: Mykle Parker)
A group of volunteers, some wearing masks and sunglasses, stand behind a table full of canned food, cereal bags, peanut butter jars, and other donation supplies.
On January 11, 2025, volunteers set up a free supply distribution in Pasadena. (Photo: Mykle Parker)
Volunteers sit at a table, some working on laptops, while others sort through shelves and a refrigerator full of a variety of essential supply donations.
Volunteers gather to organize essential supplies and strategize distribution at Neighbors and Friends Cafe in Old Town Pasadena on January 13, 2025. (Photo: Mykle Parker)
At a resutaraunt, in front of a coffee machine, shelves of produce, and a soda dispenser, two women work behind a counter serving food, next to a sign that says "Free Menudo for Families Affected, City Workers, & First Responders! Limit 1 per person"
On January 12, 2025, employees serve food to community members at Vero’s Restaurant in Pasadena, which acted as a donation hub with clean clothes and household items for fire survivors. (Photo: Mykle Parker)
A young Black woman stands in front of a bookstore with a sign "Octavia's Bookshelf", surrounded by donated water bottles and other supplies.
Simone Farrar, the niece of Octavia’s Bookshelf’s owner, stands outside the storefront with essential supplies for distribution to fire survivors. (Photo: Mykle Parker)
A lemon tree continues to bloom in a grassy yard despite its surroundings of charred building remains, ash, and a smoke-filled sky
A lemon tree blooms in the aftermath of the Eaton Canyon Fire on January 8, 2025. (Photo: Mykle Parker)
Pink magnolia blossoms in front of badly burned remains of trees and buildings with a cloudy sky in the background
A magnolia tree blooms next to the remains of a home in Altadena on January 26, 2025. (Photo: Mykle Parker)