The tragic in the Los Angeles disaster: Some b.0.di.es were found by the roadside still holding a hose, while others stayed behind in their homes with their pets despite the danger

At least 11 people have been confirmed dead, with fears that the death toll could rise as rescue operations continue amidst the devastating wildfires in Los Angeles.

 Firefighters began to limit the spread of the most destructive wildfires in this city’s history after four straight days of battling blazes that have left at least 11 people dead and burned an area larger than all of San Francisco.

Officials said Friday morning that they had made a small step toward containing the two largest fires that have devastated Los Angeles and more substantial progress in curbing three others, allowing them to rescind evacuation orders for some residents.

That headway remains tenuous. As of Friday afternoon, six wildfires were burning across Los Angeles County, including a fresh one that had ignited just hours earlier.

While the winds that have ripped across the bone-dry region are set to abate later Friday, the respite could be fleeting, with wind speeds forecast to increase again this weekend. About 153,000 people are still subject to evacuation orders, Los Angeles County Sheriff Robert Luna said.

Firefighters walk near a destroyed church in the Pacific Palisades neighborhood of Los Angeles. (David Ryder/Reuters)

“We are doing everything we can to get the situation under control,” Los Angeles Mayor Karen Bass told reporters Friday morning. “That is our number one job, to protect people’s homes, to protect people’s businesses.”

The city was already working on a plan to “aggressively rebuild,” Bass said. But as residents reached the end of a catastrophic week, it was clear that Los Angeles would never be the same: At least 10,000 structures have been damaged, whole neighborhoods razed, landmarks incinerated.

Some Altadena and Pacific Palisades residents returned to their neighborhoods on Jan. 9, 2025, to find their homes completely destroyed by wildfires. (Video: Joy Sung/The Washington Post)

Analysts believe the fires could be the costliest in U.S. history, estimating the total economic losses at anywhere from $50 billion to $150 billion.

The human toll could mount in the days ahead, officials said, as rescue workers begin the work of searching the smoldering ruins for the missing. The confirmed victims include an 82-year-old who was a devoted church volunteer, as well as a 67-year-old amputee who lived with a son in his early 20s with cerebral palsy. Both father and son were killed.

As the fires continued to rage, officials pledged to find out what started them and examine the response to the disaster. California Gov. Gavin Newsom (D) called Friday for an investigation into why hydrants lost pressure or even ran dry as firefighters and residents tried to extinguish the blazes.

Newsom also extended an invitation to President-elect Donald Trump to visit California to see the devastation wrought by the wildfires. In a letter to Trump, Newsom noted his gratitude for President Joe Biden’s swift approval of a major disaster declaration, and said he hoped that type of cooperation would continue with the incoming administration.

“We must not politicize human tragedy or spread disinformation from the sidelines,” Newsom wrote.

By Friday morning, authorities said they had started to limit the spread of the two largest fires that had burned almost unchecked since Tuesday.

The Palisades Fire was 8 percent contained, and the Eaton Fire was 3 percent contained, fire officials said. The percentage reflects how much of a blaze is surrounded by a perimeter that the fire cannot jump, even if it continues to burn.

The smaller Hurst and Kenneth fires were each more than a third contained, and the evacuation orders in those areas of the city were lifted, officials said.

The next 48 hours will be critical, as gusting winds subside and firefighting personnel and equipment pour into the region from as far away as Colorado, Quebec and Mexico. There is no rain in the forecast, which means no relief for a region suffering from severe drought.

A scant 0.03 inches of rain has fallen at Los Angeles International Airport since Oct. 1, according to NOAA data, the lowest amount on record. The average rainfall in that period is five inches.

People fleeing wildfires arrive with their pets at an evacuation center in the Pasadena Convention Center on Friday. (Agustin Paullier/AFP/Getty Images)

Meanwhile, city officials scrambled to determine the cause of erroneous evacuation alerts that rattled millions of residents in a region already on edge. One alert telling people to flee was sent across Los Angeles County on Thursday, when it was intended only for those near the Kenneth Fire in the city’s West Hills.

Kevin McGowan, the director of the office of emergency management for Los Angeles County, apologized for the errors, saying he understood the situation was “extremely frustrating, painful and scary.”

Across the city, schools remained closed and an acrid haze covered the sky. Police said they would enforce a curfew starting at 6 p.m. in evacuation zones to deter looters.

Those whose homes had burned began the arduous task of piecing together their next steps. At Westwood Recreation Center, where a gymnasium had been converted into a shelter, Phillip Cohen, 68, said he had nowhere to go.

“I’ve lost everything,” Cohen said. “I have no property, only the clothes I’ve been wearing for a few days, nothing.”

A retired educator who lives on his pension, Cohen hopes to return to his condo in Pacific Palisades. But it could take a month to determine if the building — which is scorched but standing — is salvageable or will be condemned. Meanwhile, a daunting to-do list looms: calls to his homeowners association, insurance agencies, lawyers.

David Eagle and his family fled their Palisades Highlands home on Tuesday with little more than a bag of basics. For two days, they had no idea whether their house of 22 years would survive a blaze that seemed to be swallowing their whole world.

“We never thought when we evacuated that it would take more than a day or so,” said Eagle, 70, a former TV writer and producer who now runs an electric-vehicle brokerage company. “We had no idea the fire would grow to the intensity it did.”

On Thursday, Eagle got word: The house — improbably — was still there. Eagle has spent the past 24 hours trying to get into his neighborhood to see the home for himself and to pick up belongings he left behind in the rush to flee.

During a week when so much has been out of his hands, he has tried to focus on the quotidian things he can control, if only authorities would allow him past their barricades and back up his street, a growing frustration among residents eager to access their property. “The thing that keeps bothering me when I’m trying to sleep,” he said, “is all the things I can’t get to that I need to do.”

The scale of the destruction has left institutions reeling. Julia Milton is an engineer at NASA’s Jet Propulsion Laboratory in Pasadena. Firefighters managed to protect the laboratory from the advancing inferno, and Milton’s nearby apartment building is still standing. But more than 150 of her colleagues lost their homes, according to a post by the laboratory’s director on X.

They include a woman who gave birth just three days before the fire; a family of four that was traveling when the blaze broke out and couldn’t save anything from their home; and a mother of three children who works in the laboratory’s cafeteria.

“It’s completely devastating,” Milton said.

Slater reported from Williamstown, Massachusetts. Maeve Reston in Los Angeles; María Luisa Paúl, Gaya Gupta, Brianna Tucker, Emily Wax-Thibodeaux and Ian Livingston in Washington; and Annie Gowen in Lawrence, Kansas, contributed to this report.

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