Fire and health warnings remain in place as temperatures will stay in the triple digits in Woodland Hills
Air quality officials are warning residents in the Valley to avoid outdoor activities.
Temperatures will continue to climb well above normal throughout the week, but it won't reach the unbelievable record set in 2006.
Another day of high temps and surf hazards on the way. Check here for the Woodland Hills forecast ...
Health officials are warning certain residents to avoid the outdoors, and firefighters are being inundated with calls about the smoke.
Dust off the bathing suit, and look out for the pets and elderly loved ones: local temperatures are expected to spike to dangerous levels.
Temps in the Valley could hit triple digits, and in the 80s in downtown area. At the beaches, high surf advisory in effect, too.
Quality Management District has issued a no-burn alert, banning wood burning fires through the weekend.
State Parks officials are recruiting volunteers now for a special Earth Day operation.
The South Coast Air Quality Management District is ordering residents not to light fireplaces or burn wood outdoors.
Night time temperatures may drop to freezing in some parts of the region.
Clear night skies are expected to greet stargazers, who could see as many as 20 shooting stars an hour.
The 'blood moon' is rather amazing.
Parts of the region will swelter in triple digit temperatures.
It's not just you - it is unbearably hot.
Abnormally high temperatures will continue today followed by a chance of rain.
A spectacular lunar episode is on tap this month. NASA officials say miss this one and you won't get another shot until 2033.
The predicted tsunami lapped ashore with minimal impact.
A 4.5 magnitude quake shook the Big Bear area this morning.
Los Angeles County will finally get some relief from the heat wave, but the Tuesday morning commute may be a wet one.
Thousands will turn out on September 19 to tidy up 1,200 miles of coastline
A heat advisory has been issued throughout the region.
More than 3.2 million people kept LA County lifeguards busy over the hot holiday weekend.
A blistering heat wave is expected to last with temperatures 10-15 degrees above normal.
The drought cost $2.2 billion and 17,000 jobs last year, and the state needs smarter policies to face coming water shortages, experts say.
The moon will look a little bigger in the sky Saturday.
The heat wave peaks today, but temperatures are expected to drop below normal soon.
Californians overall dropped their water use by 31.3 percent with only a handful of cities such as Beverly Hills missing mandatory cutbacks.
Isolated showers may usher in another heat wave starting today.
This year's El Niño could be the strongest ever recorded, and county officials have 30 days to report on vulnerabilities and preparations.
Temperatures are expected to begin creeping down today, following a weekend of record-setting temperatures.
With temperatures to reach 108 degrees in places such as the San Fernando Valley today, authorities advise precautions and conservation.
With triple digit temperatures facing the San Fernando Valley area, Department of Public Health officials are warning residents to take care
Because of the new moon this week, the 'shooting stars' will be more spectacular, an astronomy expert said.
The balls protect against contaminants, prevent evaporation--and cost $250 million less than another proposal.
A heat wave headed in from Texas is expected to spike temperatures by more than 10 degrees over the next several days.
Temperatures across California will be blazing hot in the days ahead. We have your heat wave safety checklist to keep your loved ones safe.
The UV index is expected to spike so high Saturday that a fair-skinned person could burn in four minutes.
The July-August shower should be the brightest of the year.
A coyote and her pups living near downtown LA have the most urban home ranges of any coyote ever studied.