LIVESTREAM IN PROGRESS: Click on the START symbol once you see it. Once playing, please click on the speaker symbol to unmute.

We love LA! Tourism Resilience Learns from Southern California Fires

Fires

This article will examine what the world’s tourism industries can learn from the Los Angeles fires and its consequences.In 2022, Los Angeles reported that its local economy earned over 34 billion dollars in overall business generated by tourism. Can Los Angeles Tourism be resilient when rebuilding?

This week, we’ve witnessed the unwavering unity of our community in the face of tragedy. The tourism and hospitality sectors acted swiftly to meet the needs of Angelenos and visitors. From securing hotel accommodations and support for those displaced to the restaurant community stepping up to provide meals during an urgent time of need, their efforts have been a testament to LA’s compassion and solidarity.

California Governor Gavin Newsom has described the Los Angeles wildfires as the worst natural disaster in US history “in terms of the scale and scope.”

The blazes are on track to be among the costliest ever seen in the US, with losses expected to exceed $135bn.

According to his mother, an Australian ex-child star passed away during the recent California wildfires that destroyed his family’s Malibu residence.

The world-famous grief specialist Elisabeth Kübler-Ross wrote about the various stages of grief.

She noted that people often go through five stages of grief, and although each person is different, she said there are common patterns in grief.

Kübler-Ross wrote that when facing a loss, we go through the following stages:

  • denial
  • anger
  • state of bargaining
  • depression
  • acceptance of the reality

Kübler-Ross’s model has proven beneficial when dealing with personal grief and in cases of community tragedy, such as the Los Angeles fires. 

We can apply her model not only on the micro level but also on the macro level. 

Much of her model describes what the people in the Los Angeles region of California are now feeling.

Politicians, academics, and others will study the surreal tragedy unfolding in California.

Indeed, many of the people in Los Angeles who have lost their homes might well be passing the Kübler-Ross stages of grief.

As time passes, the people of Los Angeles will have to accept their tragic reality and decide whom to hold responsible. 

Los Angeles’ citizens will surely ask many questions about why basic risk management principles have not been applied.

Why was there a lack of redundancy in the city’s risk management plan if the one-party rule failed? What were the reasons that the city’s, state’s, and federal government’s leadership failed, and how is it that Californians, the highest taxed state in the United States, lacked essential resources

Did elected representatives use their tax money wisely? 

Once the crisis is over, California’s citizens may question how their defunding the police movement hurt their city and the consequences of major personnel and financial cuts to the fire department while money was spent on what now appears to be frivolous projects. 

These and many more questions directly pertain to the citizens of Los Angeles, and they should demand honest answers. 

As such, these basic questions are outside this article’s boundaries. 

Instead, this article will examine what the world’s tourism industries can learn from these fires and their consequences.

Tourism is of great importance to southern California’s economy.

In 2022, Los Angeles reported that its local economy generated over 34 billion dollars in overall business from tourism.

The local tourism industry produced approximately 528,000 jobs, and Los Angeles collected over 3 billion dollars in tourism taxes, saving local taxpayers $893.00 per household. 

Considering the importance of tourism to Los Angeles’ economy and the fact that Los Angeles will be the opening venue of the 2026 (soccer /football) World Cup and the host city for the 2028 Olympic Games, it behooves tourism leaders to ask how these fires will impact Southern California’s tourism.

On a broader scale, what can tourism centers worldwide learn from California’s leadership failures?

The Los Angeles fires are a perfect example of the symbiotic relationship between tourism and the locale in which the tourism industry operates. 

Although the tourism industry’s clients are not locals, it is dependent on local services such as water, transportation, fire and police services, and health services.

When one of these fails, the entire industry will be affected.

In the case of Los Angeles, the negative publicity the city received can only harm the city’s tourism industry and will harm the entire region.

Event planners may shy away from holding conventions if they are unsure of the environment or if a convention’s potential delegates and exhibitors are fearful.

Event planners might seek alternative venues, especially if they lose confidence in a city’s leadership. 

Tourism officials mustn’t deny the direct and indirect problems that these fires have caused.

For example, what are the health risks of breathing toxic air, and how long will these health risks remain? 

Visitors will breathe the same air as locals and want to know if drinking or bathing in local water is safe. Immediately after these devastating fires, hotel rooms were at a premium. How is the tourism industry handling the lack of hotel rooms caused by thousands of people being evacuated from their homes or having lost their homes? Do Southern California tourism officials need to cancel conferences or ask potential visitors to postpone travel?Here are a few of the many things tourism officials need to consider in light of the Los Angeles tragedies.

  • Be prepared for natural disasters. California is not the only location prone to natural disasters.
    Natural disasters can come in multiple forms, from the devastating tsunami in the eastern Indian Ocean basin (2004), to Hurricanes Katrina in New Orleans and Wilma in Mexico (2005), to earthquakes such as the earthquake that devastated Haiti in 2010.
    Different locales are prone to other types of disasters. Natural disasters not only leave a tourism locale shattered but also mean the local tourism industry may be devastated.
    How well prepared is your tourism industry to handle a natural disaster?  How well do you cooperate and coordinate with both local and international media?  
    In a disaster, perceptions become realities all too quickly.
  • Understand that part of your brand is the perception (and the reality) of your locale’s safety and security. 
    Without a clear and committed approach to visitor safety and security, the destination will acquire a negative reputation that may take years to overcome.
    Tourism security and well-being are vital foundations for destination building and sustainability.
    Tourism safety and security may be as important as infrastructure, policy, governance, and marketing investment for a locale’s long-term sustainability and longevity.
  • As we learned in 2020, a pandemic or health crisis can decimate the tourism industry. 
    One of the scariest things about a pandemic is that, unlike a natural disaster, we do not hear or see a pandemic; we only see its results.
    Pandemics gnaw at the heart of the tourism industry, and the negative publicity they create may linger long after the pandemic has been conquered or stopped. This fear of illness directly impacts the tourism industry’s responsibility to its guests.
    To be a member of the international destination community is to accept the responsibility of caring for travelers.
  • Create tourism security partnerships. 
    The lack of coordination in Southern California was devastating. The State had no real system for moving personnel and resources from one location to another.
    Fire chiefs across the state reported how difficult it was to pull resources from locales.
  • A lack of a good tourism risk management plan can be expensive.
    Losing visitors due to aspects within the control of the destination’s leaders at both public and private sector levels, especially fear of crime or illness, is to accept unacceptable losses in a destination. 
    It takes years to build a tourism locale’s reputation, but it only takes one or two incidents to lose that reputation and the revenue that goes with it. 
    When a tourism locale loses its reputation, it often loses jobs, investment opportunities, self-image, and, to some extent, humanity.  Tourism security, then, is tourism caring and forms the basis of the hospitality industry. 
  • Have multiple plans in place before an event and not after the event. 
    Crisis management is essential in crises, but tourism and travel officials need to ask themselves if the crisis might have been lessened in severity or even avoided if they had had good proactive risk management plans. 
    Crises come in all sorts of sizes. 
    The Los Angeles fires were a crisis on a large scale, but government regulators have imposed a million small inconveniences on tourism, creating a sense of continual mini-crises. 

  • AC Hotel by Marriott Los Angeles South Bay 2130 E. Maple Ave., El Segundo 90245 (310) 322-3333     Beach Cities / LAX   Please reach out to ja*************@ma******.com
  • AC Hotel Downtown Los Angeles, 1260 S Figueroa Street, Los Angeles 90015, (213) 385-2225     Downtown / LA Metro   For special rates to email sa***@mo******.com and that pet fees are being waived till 1/31.
  • Air Venice, 5 Rose Ave, Venice 90291 (310) 452-8247     Beach Cities / LAX  gm************@be************.com
  • Aloft El Segundo LAX, 475 N. Pacific Coast Highway, El Segundo 90245, (424) 290-5555     Beach Cities / LAX. Call our Front Office. A front desk agent or manager will be able to quote you our special rate for fire related bookings.
  • Alsace LA, 5170 west adams blvd, los angeles 06280 (404) 305-5400 
  • Andaz West Hollywood, 8401 Sunset Blvd., West Hollywood 90069, 1 (323) 656-1234   West Hollywood la***********************@hy***.com
  • Autograph Hotel PASEO, 45-400 Larkspur Ln, Palm Desert 92260 Corporate code: T4140
  • BLVD Hotel & Spa, 10730 Ventura Blvd., Studio City 91604, (818) 623-9100     The Valley  , Just say you are an evacuee
  • Chamberlain West Hollywood, 1000 Westmount Dr., West Hollywood 90069, 1 (310) 657-7400   West Hollywood 
  • Conrad Los Angeles, 100 South Grand Ave, Los Angeles 90012, (213) 349-8585 Downtown / LA Metro   
  • Courtyard Marina del Rey, 4360 Via Marina, Marina Del Rey 90292, (310) 439-2908 , Call (310) 439-2908 Front Desk to inquire about availability of displacement rates.
  • Days Inn by Wyndham West Covina, 2804 e Garvey Ave s, West Covina 91791
  • DoubleTree by Hilton Hotel Los Angeles – Rosemead, 888 Montebello Blvd., Rosemead 91767, (323) 722-8800 , $139 rate will be offered.
  • DoubleTree by Hilton Pomona, 3101 W Temple Ave, Pomona 91768, Rates of $139
  • Dream Hollywood Hotel, 6417 Selma Ave., Los Angeles 90028, 323-844-6417 Hollywood,  20% off Best Available Rates for anyone needing emergency housing. Pet fees are capped at $150 flat regardless of length of stay. Reservations can be made by calling the main line at (323) 844-6417.
  • Dunes Inn Sunset, 5625 West Sunset Blvd., Hollywood 90028, 1 (323) 467-5171 
  • Dunes Inn Wilshire, 4300 Wilshire Blvd., Los Angeles 90010, 1 (323) 938-3616   Downtown / LA Metro   
  • Element By Westin Palmdale, 39325 Trade Center Dr, Palmdale 93551. Call the hotel and mention you are an evacuee due to a power outage or wildfire. (661) 224-1200
  • Embassy Suites Valencia, 28508 Westinghouse Place, Santa Clarita 91355, (661) 257-3111              
  • Epic Hotel, 4335 Rosemead Blvd., Pico Rivera 90660, (562) 842-3055              
  • Earth Inn Los Angeles, 2050 Marengo St, Los Angeles 90033
  • Extended Stay America – Long Beach, 4105 E Willow St, Long Beach 90815, Please contact Victor Lopez Email: vl****@ex**********.com OR Mobile: 808-359-4914
  • Extended Stay America – Los Angeles Burbank, 2200 Empire Ave, Burbank 91504
  • The Valley , Contact AB Quintana by texting (980) 345-1964 if you need more than 5 rooms. Recommend to book online.
  • Extended Stay America – Los Angeles Glendale, 1377 W. Glenoaks Blvd., Glendale 91201
  • The Valley, Contact AB Quintana if you need more than 5 rooms by texting (980) 345-1964.
  • Extended Stay America – Los Angeles Torrance Del Amo Circle, 3995 W Carson St, Torrance 90503, (310) 543-0048, Please text AB Quintana at 980-345-1964 with name, check in & check out dates, pet or no pets.
  • Extended Stay America – Monrovia, 930 S Fifth Ave, Monrovia 91016 Please contact Victor Lopez Email: vl****@ex**********.com OR Mobile: 808-359-4914
  • Extended Stay America Los Angeles – Torrance Harbor Gateway, 19200 Harborgate Way, Torrance 90501-1317, (310) 328-6000     Beach Cities / LAX Contact AB Quintana – Text 980-345-1964 for bookings
  • Extended Stay Los Angeles – El Segundo, 1910 E. Mariposa Ave., El Segundo 90245 Beach Cities / LAX, Contact AB Quintana if you need more than 5 rooms by texting (980) 345-1964.
  • Fairfield Inn & Suites Los Angeles LAX El Segundo,525 N Pacific Coast Hwy, El Segundo 90245, Beach Cities / LAX   Call our Front Desk. Any front desk agent or manager can quote you our special rate for fire-related bookings.
  • Fairfield Inn Anaheim Hills Orange County, 201 N Via Cortez, Anaheim 92807, Call (951) 264-0485
  • Four Points by Sheraton LAX, 9750 Airport Blvd., Los Angeles 90045, (310) 645-4600     Beach Cities / LAX , G11 Promo Code
  • Freehand Los Angeles, 416 W. 8th Street, Los Angeles 90014, (213) 612-0021     Downtown / LA Metro  ca*******@th*********.com
  • Friendship Motor Inn, 1148 Crenshaw Blvd, Los Angeles 90019, (323) 937-1600 , Call and mention the wildfires.
  • Gateway Hotel Santa Monica, 1920 Santa Monica Boulevard, Santa Monica 90404, (310) 829-9100     Santa Monica, Please ask for the HERO rate by calling 310-829-9100
  • Hilton Checkers Los Angeles, 535 S. Grand Ave., Los Angeles 90071, (213) 624-0000 Downtown / LA Metro   
  • Hilton Garden Inn – Marina del Rey, 4200 Admiralty Way, Marina del Rey 90292 (310) 301-2000  Beach Cities / LAX  10% discount. Use Corporate ID#2686546.
  • Hilton Garden Inn Los Angeles Airport, 5249 W. Century Blvd., Los Angeles 90045 (310) 645-2200  Beach Cities / LAX    Please contact the hotel at 310.645.2200 with code we care and we will offer a $109+ tax rate.
  • Hilton Garden Inn Los Angeles/Hollywood, 2005 N. Highland Ave., Los Angeles 90068, (323) 876-8600     Hollywood,   Please call/text/email to Sales Manager – Monica Martinez at Office: (323) 762-1052 ; Cell (213) 718-2771 ; email: mo*************@ai*******.com and/or Director of Sales Bryan Barrera at office: (323)762-1045 ; cell (213) 393-0749 ; email: br***********@ai*******.com
  • Hilton Los Angeles Airport, 5711 W. Century Blvd., Los Angeles 90045, 1 (310) 410-4000   Beach Cities / LAX Please email us at LA*************************@hi****.com with the Subject: “Fire Relief Stay Request.”
  • Hilton Los Angeles/Universal City, 555 Universal Hollywood Dr., Universal City 91608, (818) 506-2500  Hollywood  Reduced rates, call
  • Hilton Woodland Hills, 6360 Canoga Ave., Woodland Hills 91367, (818) 595-1000 The Valley  
  • Holiday Inn Express West Los Angeles, 11250 Santa Monica Blvd., Los Angeles 90025. 1 (310) 478-1400   Westside   (310) 478-1400 or email hi*******@dk*******.com or er****@dk*******.com. Please note the website does not reflect this; contact us directly.
  • Hollywood Hotel – The Hotel Of Hollywood, 1160 North Vermont Avenue, Los Angeles 90029, (323) 746-0444  Hollywood  www.TheHollywoodHotel.com – Already Discounted on Booking Engine
  • Hotel Erwin, 1697 Pacific Ave., Venice Beach 90291, (310) 452-1111 Beach Cities / LAX
  • Hotel Indigo Los Angeles Downtown, 899 Francisco St., Los Angeles 90017, (213) 232-8851 Downtown / LA Metro  Hotel Indigo offers 20% off rooms, waived amenities, and pet fees.
  • Hotel Maya, 700 Queensway Drive, Long Beach, CA 90802, Long Beach 908021 (562) 481-3893  Starting Sunday, January 12 and on.
  • Hotel Per La, 649 S Olive Street, Los Angeles 90014 (213) 358-0000     Downtown / LA Metro
  • Hotel Ziggy, 8462 Sunset Blvd, West Hollywood 90069 +1-323-654-4600    West Hollywood  
  • Hyatt Place LAX El Segund, 750 N Nash Street, El Segundo 90245, (310) 322-2880, please reach out to ja*************@hy***.com
  • Hyatt Place/ Hyatt House LAX Century Blvd, 5959 W Century Blvd, Los Angeles 90045, (310) 258-9000  Beach Cities / LAX- call directly at 702-553-5017.
  • Jamaica Bay Inn Tapestry Collection by Hilton, 4175 Admiralty Way, Marina del Rey 90302, (310) 823-5333     Beach Cities / LAX Discount offer 12% off, and rates have not been inflated due to demand.
  • Jolly Roger Hotel, 2904 Washington Blvd., Marina del Rey 90292, (310) 822-2904     Beach Cities / LAX Expedia.com. or Booking.com
  • Kawada Hotel, 200 S. Hill St., Los Angeles 90012, (213) 621-4455     Downtown / LA Metro, Special rate code is SAFE.
  • Kimpton Everly Hotel Hollywood, 1800 Argyle Avenue, Los Angeles 90028, (213) 279-3532 Hollywood 
  • La Posada Motel, 7615 Sepulveda Blvd, Van Nuys 91405, (818) 994-8547
  • LAX Airport Hotel, 107 E Juniper St, Inglewood 90302, (310) 674-8821    
  • Le Parc Suite Hotel, 733 North Knoll Drive, West Hollywood 90069, 310.855.8888 West Hollywood  
  • Loews Hollywood Hotel, 1755 N. Highland Ave., Hollywood 90028, 1 (323) 856-1200   Hollywood – Let the front desk know you are an evacuee.
  • Luxe Sunset Boulevard Hotel, 11461 Sunset Blvd., Los Angeles 90049, (310) 476-6571 Westside   – Just speak to the front desk or sales team, we will accommodate.
  • Mama Shelter, 6500 Selma Ave., Los Angeles 90028, (323) 785-6600     Hollywood , Must call for preferred rate (323) 785-6600
  • Marina del Rey Hotel, 13534 Bali Way, Marina del Rey 90292, 1 (310) 301-1000   Beach Cities / LAX  : 15% discount for those affected; enter the discount code MDRCONC
  • Miyako Hotel Los Angeles, 328 E. First St., Los Angeles 90012, 1 (213) 617-2000   Downtown / LA Metro  , (213) 617-2000 EXT. 0
  • Montrose At Beverly Hills, 900 Hammond St,, West Hollywood 90069, (310) 855-1115     West Hollywood  
  • Moxy Downtown Los Angeles, 1260 S Figueroa Street, Los Angeles 90015, (310) 669-9252 Downtown / LA Metro , For special rates to email sa***@mo******.com and that pet fees are being waived till 1/31.
  • Omni Los Angeles Hotel, 251 S. Olive St., Los Angeles 90012, (213) 617-3300     Downtown / LA Metro  , Local Neighbor Rate online corporate code: 45271246919
  • Pacific Palms Resort, One Industry Hills Pkwy., City of Industry 91744, (626) 854-2315        
  • Parkwest Bicycle Casino Hotel, 888 Bicycle Casino Dr, Bell Gardens 90201   Use promo code: SPECIAL25 or call (562) 806-4646.
  • Plaza la Reina, 10850 Lindbrook Drive, Los Angeles 90024, (888) 836-8800     Westside              
  • Residence Inn Los Angeles LAX/Century Boulevard, 5933 West Century Blvd, Los Angeles 90045, (310) 568-7700     Beach Cities / LAX, Call the front desk directly at 310-568-7700 to inquire about the availability of displacement rates.
  • Residence Inn Marina del Rey, 4360 Via Marina, Marina del Rey 90292, (310) 439-2908  ,Call (310) 439-2908 Front Desk to inquire about availability of displacement rates.
  • Rodeway Inn Hollywood, 777 N. Vine St., Hollywood 90038, (323) 463-5671     Hollywood , Use code: FV25
  • Sandbourne Santa Monica, 1740 Ocean Ave., Santa Monica 90401, (310) 899-6134 Santa Monica
  • Sheraton Universal, 333 Universal Hollywood Dr., Universal City 91608, (818) 980-1212 Hollywood 
  • STILE Downtown Los Angeles by Kasa, 929 South Broadway, Los Angeles 90015, (213) 623-3233  Downtown / LA Metro Visit website at www.kasa.com, search Los Angeles, and go to STILE Downtown Los Angeles. Use booking code RELIEF, valid until 1/31/2025. The rate is $79, waived resort fee for standard rooms (Studio Queen, Premium Queen, Studio King, Premium King, Double Queen.) Email the General Manager at ju**********@ka**.com with any questions or assistance.
  • The Aster, 1717 Vine Street, Los Angeles 90028, (323) 962-1717 Hollywood , Visit our direct website or call the front desk at the number above and we are taking walk-ins.
  • The Biltmore Los Angeles, 506 S. Grand Ave., Los Angeles 90071, (213) 624-1011  Downtown / LA Metr , Use promo code “Relief” to get a special room rate of $149/night plus tax and 15% discount on food and beverage at Smeraldi’s Restaurant and Gallery Bar and Grill. Special parking rate available.
  • The Broadway Inn, 8800 S Broadway, Los Angeles 90003, (323) 778-0266              
  • The Commerce Casino & Hotel Los Angeles, 6121 E. Telegraph Rd., Commerce 90040, 1 (323) 728-3600 
  • The Garland, 4222 Vineland Ave., North Hollywood 91602-3759, (818) 980-8000 The Valley  “Valley Staycay” package includes 20% off the best avail rate,
  • The Godfrey Hotel Hollywood, 1400 Cahuenga Blvd, Los Angeles 90028, (323) 762-1000 Hollywood, Available and dog-friendly for displaced residents. Call the hotel or email at in**@go*******************.com for more information and to book. Standard cancellation policy will not apply. Cancel with no penalty fee should plans change.
  • The Hoxton, Downtown LA, 1060 South Broadway, Los Angeles 90015 (213) 725-5900     Downtown / LA Metro    Guests should book directly on our website with code HERETOHELP for a $100 per/night rate (plus taxes and fees) that’s valid until Friday, January 10th, 2025. We are dog friendly, and dogs always stay for free.
  • The Inn at UCLA, 330 Charles E Young Dr E, Los Angeles 90024, (310) 825-2923
  • The Kinney, 737 Washington Blvd., Marina del Rey 90292, (310) 821-4455     Beach Cities / LAX
  • The LINE LA, 3515 Wilshire Blvd., Los Angeles 90010, (213) 381-7411     Downtown / LA Metro, Promo Code: LOCAL23 (included in the link)
  • The Live Hotel, 1901 W. Olympic Blvd., Los Angeles 90006, (213) 385-7141     Downtown / LA Metro
  • The Pierside Hotel, 120 COLORADO AVE, Santa Monica 90401, (310) 451-0676     Santa Monica
  • The Queen Mary, 1126 Queens Hwy., Long Beach 90802, (877) 342-0738     Neighboring Regions. To support those displaced, the Queen Mary is offering rooms at $189 per night, which includes breakfast buffet for two each day of your stay. We are waiving all fees – including historical preservation fee and pet – and providing a  “buy now, pay later” option at checkout via Flexpay.
  • The Shay, 8801 Washington Boulevard, Culver City 90232, (424) 361-6700     Westside
  • The Sojourn, 15485 Ventura Blvd, Sherman Oaks 91403, The Valley  You can call the front desk directly to book and mention you are under evacuation to receive 20% off your stay.
  • The Wayfarer Downtown LA, 813 S Flower St., Los Angeles 90017, (213) 285-4411 Downtown / LA Metro, Please call Front Desk and share you are evacuating due to fire, and we will honor the best discount available. Range from $129 – $149
  • The Westin Bonaventure Hotel & Suites, 404 S. Figueroa St., Los Angeles 90071, (213) 624-1000  Downtown / LA Metro Corporate code C7Z.
  • Thompson Hollywood, 1541 Wilcox Avenue, Los Angeles 90028, (310) 717-5554  Hollywood , Call the hotel directly and reference fire evacuations
  • Travelers Motel at LAX,10100 S Inglewood Ave, Inglewood 90304, (310) 259-1154,  (310) 259-1154 text only, please
  • UCLA Luskin Conference Center, 425 Westwood Plaza, Los Angeles 90095, (855) 522-8252 Westside, Call the reservation number
  • USC Hotel3540 S. Figueroa St., Los Angeles 90007, 833-2-BOOK-USC         Downtown / LA Metro, First responder, and city official special rates.
  • Volume Hollywood, 6516 Selma Ave, Los Angeles 90028, (323) 987-6516  Rates not available online yet, please call hotel direct.
  • W Hollywood Hotel & Residences, 6250 Hollywood Blvd., Hollywood 90028

Please pray for the people of Los Angeles and if you can contribute to their rebuilding.

Here are some ways to help:

  • California Community Foundation, Wildfire Recovery Fund
    The California Community Foundation’s Wildfire Recovery Fund supports the recovery and resilience of communities devastated by wildfires, particularly underserved and marginalized populations.
    https://www.calfund.org/funds/wildfire-recovery-fund/ 
  • Los Angeles Fire Foundation
    The LAFD Foundation provides vital equipment and funds critical programs to help the LAFD save lives and protect communities.
    https://supportlafd.org/
  • American Red Cross
    The American Red Cross is working with its partners to provide shelter, food, emotional support and health services. You can support the Red Cross by making a donation online, by calling (800) 733-2767 or texting REDCROSS to 90999.
  • Donation Centers Open in Impacted Areas
    The City has announced donation drop-off locations to support families, residents and workers impacted by the LA wildfires. Donation items are requested based on reported community needs. 
    https://mayor.lacity.gov/news/city-announces-donation-centers-open-impacted-areas 
Subscribe
Notify of
guest
0 Comments
Newest
Oldest
Inline Feedbacks
View all comments
0
Would love your thoughts, please comment.x
()
x
Share to...