Destroyed by LA fires, this community is showing how to rebound – and rebuild

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Margot Stueber, upbeat in her sporty sunglasses and hot-pink sweater, broke ground on her new home this week – the first to do so in this community that lost nearly 6,000 homes to the January wildfires that ravaged Greater Los Angeles. It’s a milestone, marking the remarkably quick clearing of lots and the start of the next phase of recovery and rebuilding.

“Today is the first day of my new life,” she enthused to reporters gathered at a ribbon cutting on her cleared dirt lot. And to those coming up behind her who may be worried and discouraged, she has a message: “If I can do it, all you guys out there can do it. Just dare to envision a positive future for yourself and for Altadena.”

Challenges abound for the thousands displaced by the Eaton and Palisades fires that destroyed more than 16,000 structures in the Los Angeles area – most of them homes. Survivors are grappling with slow and inadequate insurance payouts, uninhabitable dwellings, and upended lives.

Why We Wrote This

Recovery after a natural disaster often involves a long, complex recovery process. For the thousands displaced by this year’s California wildfires, quick disaster agency responses and help from local officials have helped speed that work.

But one critical aspect of the recovery process is making record time. The U.S. Army Corps of Engineers is far ahead of schedule hauling debris from lots. At the same time, local officials are streamlining the building permit process to speed up construction as lots are cleared.

The Corps has until the fires’ anniversary next January to finish, but “We anticipate being substantially complete by the end of the summer,” says Army Corps Col. Eric Swenson, who is overseeing debris removal. “We are on a record pace.”

Francine Kiefer/The Christian Science Monitor

U.S. Army Corps Col. Eric Swenson, who is leading the Corps’ debris clearing in the Eaton and Palisades fires, stands at the cleared lot of owner Margot Stueber in Altadena, California, April 28, 2025.

Colonel Swenson attributes his expedited timetable to the quick work of the Environmental Protection Agency in the first phase of cleanup. The EPA removed hazardous waste from burn areas in one month, rather than in the projected three, thanks to the federal government tripling its resources, he says.

President Donald Trump “came out here and said we’re going to get this done faster – and more resources showed up,” he says. “That allowed the EPA to go faster, which meant that I could go faster.”

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