Arizona Task Force 1, which is managed by the Phoenix Fire Department, is ready and waiting to be called upon to assist with relief efforts.
Arizonans are stepping up to help California as it battles multiple destructive wildfires that have scorched thousands of acres, destroyed thousands of buildings, and left multiple people dead.
Both the Phoenix Fire Department and the Arizona Department of Forestry and Fire Management are deploying personnel and sending equipment.
Arizona Task Force 1 could be activated by FEMA at a moment’s notice to assist in the ongoing battle against wildfires in the Los Angeles area.
The agency, which also has a team named Arizona Task Force 1 but is separate from the one managed by the Phoenix Fire Department, had sent members of its task force to California since Jan. 5 to ...
Arizona firefighters were deployed to help combat the raging wildfires that have torn through over 20,000 acres in Southern California, officials said Wednesday. The Phoenix Fire Department and ...
Utility workers from the Navajo Nation headed to Los Angeles on Thursday to help rebuild the electrical grid damaged by historic southern California wildfires. The Navajo Tribe Utility Authority announced 11 team members specializing in electric line work were sent from Fort Defiance, Arizona, to the Los Angeles area.
In a state that averages more than 7,500 wildfires a year some California homeowners keep helmets and fire hoses handy. However, the Los Angeles fires demonstrate a new reality: Wildfires in the state are growing larger and more ferocious and burning into suburbs and cities more often, experts told USA TODAY.
Firefighters from the Navajo Nation worked tirelessly through a haze of dust to cut away dirt from a narrow road at the side of a mountain struck by a landslide in Southern California.
These Valley bars and restaurants are raising money and collecting donations to help those impacted by the Los Angeles fires.
As fires continue to burn in southern California, we're taking a look at how Arizona firefighting agencies are prepared for wildfires.
If a massive fire occurred in Phoenix, like the wildfires ravaging LA, would Phoenix have enough water to put them out?