Santa Ana wind threat returns 1 year after LA wildfire disaster
LOS ANGELES – Powerful wind gusts are blowing across parts of Southern California — a wintertime phenomenon known as a Santa Ana wind event — nearly a year to the day that the same weather pattern helped spark the devastating Los Angeles wildfires.
However, instead of last year’s bone-dry conditions that fueled the state’s worst wildfire disaster, recent record amounts of rainfall have saturated soils this year, rendering a weather-driven wildfire threat virtually nonexistent.
The National Weather Service has issued High Wind Alerts for much of Southern California through Sunday.
A High Wind Warning is in place in the mountains north of Los Angeles where wind gusts of up to 70 mph are possible.

(FOX Weather)
Instead of a wildfire threat, the NWS warned that strong wind gusts may cause hazardous driving conditions for high-profile cars and trucks along the southern part of the Interstate 5 corridor through the Grapevine.
In addition, sporadic power outages are possible as power poles are more susceptible to falling when the ground is saturated.

FILE – JURUPA VALLEY CA MARCH 14, 2024 Gusty Santa Ana winds toppled this Amazon box truck on the 60 Freeway east transition to the 15 Freeway north. It was a single vehicle accident with no injuries Thursday, March 14, 2024.
(Allen J. Schaben / Los Angeles Times via Getty Images / Getty Images)
Santa Ana wind warnings were first issued on Jan. 5, 2025, two days ahead of the first reports of the flames that would become the Palisades Fire.
Earlier this week, FOX Weather Correspondent Robert Ray, who covered the historic wildfire disaster as it unfolded, noted that the mountains north of Los Angeles were “lush and green with vegetation,” a stark contrast from a year ago.
RECOUNTING THE HEARTBREAKING LOSS CAUSED BY THE DEADLY PALISADES AND EATON FIRES 1 YEAR LATER
It’s been one year since the Palisades and Eaton fires started on Jan. 7, 2025. Leading up to the fire, weather conditions were extremely conducive for wildfire starts in California. FOX Weather Meteorologist Haley Meier looks back at the day the fire started and how quickly things escalated a week after the start.
Nearly a year after the disaster, reconstruction is still just beginning for many victims.
Many community members who Ray spoke with were frustrated by the slow progress.
One year after the Palisades and Eaton fires destroyed thousands of buildings and left 31 people dead, destruction still remains in the Pacific Palisades neighborhood. Hundreds of homes are in the process of being rebuilt, but a lot of pain and heartbreak remains in the charred structures of the neighborhood. FOX Weather Correspondent Robert Ray takes a look at where things stand now.
In their totality, the wildfires scorched more than 57,000 acres, killed 31 people and destroyed more than 18,000 structures.
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