-
Retail trade rebounds: broad-based growth in food, non-food and fuel sales - 7 mins ago
-
Viral Beauty Routines Are Damaging Tween and Teen Skin, Study Warns - 8 mins ago
-
‘I gave it my all’: Ronaldo sheds tears of joy after Portugal’s Nations League win - 23 mins ago
-
NY Giants Star Issued Jaxson Dart an NFL Reality Check - 49 mins ago
-
NBA Finals Game 2 takeaways: Thunder bounce back to even series 1-1 - about 1 hour ago
-
Packers QB Jordan Love Generating Buzz Ahead of 2025 Season - about 1 hour ago
-
UFL Top 10 Plays from Conference Championships | United Football League - 2 hours ago
-
Israeli forces board charity boat bound for Gaza with activist Greta Thunberg aboard - 2 hours ago
-
Tom Brady Doesn’t Hold Back About Chiefs’ Patrick Mahomes - 2 hours ago
-
2025 UEFA Nations League Finals: Portugal's trophy ceremony following victory over Spain - 3 hours ago
Meet the 104-year-old hero helping save homes in Brentwood from Palisades fire
Los Angeles watched in awe and terror this weekend as a squadron of aircraft bombed water on the Palisades fire as it marched toward Brentwood and Encino.
Much of the TV coverage focused the astonishing sight of choppers day and night flying over tall columns of flames, depositing their water and flying away as red flames transformed into puffs of white smoke. Bystanders cheered direct hits.
But there is another hero of the epic aerial firefight that doesn’t get much applause: the Encino Reservoir.
For its 104 years, the Encino Reservoir has been a treasured asset to the people of the San Fernando Valley. But this week, it may well help entire communities in the path of the fire.
The Encino Reservoir as seen from above on Sept. 28, 2022. The reservoir acts as an emergency water supply for Los Angeles.
(Hayley Smith / Los Angeles Times)
One reason firefighters can hit the fire so aggressively is because they can collect water just a few miles away from the front lines. The reservoir is tucked into the Encino Hills, within the mandatory evacuation area.
To understand how crucial the reservoir has been, check out this time-lapse mapping of aircraft cycling from Encino to the fire and back.
The reservoir is a beloved and protected landmark in Encino. Residents fought for years over the city of Los Angeles’ plans to supply the area with water from a different source, with officials pointing out that open-air reservoirs are prone to contamination by rain runoff, bird droppings and other contaminants.
After much debate, the city finally decided to keep the reservoir open and use it for emergencies such as earthquakes, droughts and terror attacks, The Times reported in 2002.
Encino was one of several landmark reservoirs built in the 1920s as part of William Mulholland’s plan to secure and store more water around the growing city (the others include the Stone Canyon and the Hollywood, which firefighters credit with supplying ample water for chopper drops earlier this week when the Sunset Fire broke out in Hollywood).
Source link