Updated
Updated · LAist · Jun 21
Newsom Declares Emergency Over Boyle Heights Fire as PM2.5 Hits Unhealthy Levels
Updated
Updated · LAist · Jun 21

Newsom Declares Emergency Over Boyle Heights Fire as PM2.5 Hits Unhealthy Levels

3 articles · Updated · LAist · Jun 21

Summary

  • Gov. Gavin Newsom declared a state of emergency Saturday, hours after Los Angeles issued a local emergency, unlocking added state resources for the Boyle Heights warehouse fire.
  • PM2.5 pollution reached unhealthy and very unhealthy-for-sensitive-groups levels across parts of central Los Angeles, the San Gabriel Valley, East San Fernando Valley and Northwest San Bernardino Valley, with an advisory in effect until 12:30 p.m. Sunday.
  • LAFD said crews have contained the blaze to about half the cold-storage building, but dense foam-lined steel walls, zero visibility and refrigeration chemicals have made the fire unusually hard to attack.
  • Firefighters are now trying to safely remove 85 million pounds of frozen food before it spoils; helicopter water drops continued through the weekend and crews pulled out forklifts with lithium-ion batteries to reduce hazards.
  • Authorities said the fire began Wednesday at a Lineage Logistics facility, likely involving rooftop solar testing by contractors; ammonia has since been removed, no shelter-in-place is currently needed, and smoke could shift toward southeast L.A. County on Sunday.

Insights

After a solar fire in 2024, how did a second catastrophic blaze ignite at the same warehouse?
Are our cities' green energy ambitions creating unforeseen and catastrophic fire risks?
With 85 million pounds of food spoiling, is a biohazard now a bigger threat than the fire?