Updated
Updated · Los Angeles Times · Jul 3
Altus Power Is Accused of Halting Boyle Heights Demolition as 85 Million Pounds of Food Rot
Updated
Updated · Los Angeles Times · Jul 3

Altus Power Is Accused of Halting Boyle Heights Demolition as 85 Million Pounds of Food Rot

3 articles · Updated · Los Angeles Times · Jul 3

Summary

  • Lineage said crews with permits were ready to start demolishing the fire-ravaged Boyle Heights warehouse Friday, but received a Thursday notice halting the work and blamed Altus Power for obstructing cleanup.
  • Altus said multiple parties had asked Lineage to preserve evidence because the June 17 fire's cause is still undetermined, and the rooftop solar equipment remains under scrutiny.
  • Mayor Karen Bass told Lineage no court order bars cleanup, saying the city wants investigators' areas protected while work continues on flareup control and removal of rotting food waste.
  • About 85 million pounds of spoiled food have been hauled out since Sunday as officials try to curb odors, pests and truck impacts after smoke and soot hit nearby residents.
  • Councilmember Ysabel Jurado urged all parties to adopt a written evidence-preservation protocol so the investigation does not delay remediation, while questions remain over cleanup timing and long-term air-pollution effects.

Insights

Why is a corporate dispute delaying the cleanup of 85 million pounds of rotting food after a massive warehouse fire?
Beyond the smoke, what contamination from the fire is seeping into the LA River and the city's environment?
Is the toxic fallout from the LA fire a single disaster or a warning about industrial hazards in urban neighborhoods?