Giving Compass' Take:
- Mallika Seshadri and Betty Márquez Rosales report on schools' progress on recovery from the L.A. fires on the anniversary of the fires.
- How can donors and funders help provide ongoing support to rebuild and renew communities impacted by natural disasters?
- Search for a nonprofit focused on disaster relief and recovery.
- Access more nonprofit data, advanced filters, and comparison tools when you upgrade to Giving Compass Pro.
What is Giving Compass?
We connect donors to learning resources and ways to support community-led solutions. Learn more about us.
A year ago, Tanya Reyes watched in disbelief as the Eaton fire incinerated her Altadena home. As her three daughters listed everything they had lost in the days that followed, Reyes kept reminding them that what mattered most was that they still had each other, even as schools grieve the losses from the fires.
A year later, Reyes is struggling. The steadiness she once summoned for her children has been worn down by chronic back pain, brought on by the strain of moving every few months, and the emotional toll of rebuilding her family’s life while working her teaching job, supporting pregnant and parenting teens.
Reyes is a teacher at McAlister High School in the Los Angeles Unified School District (LAUSD) and is among thousands of Los Angeles-area residents who watched their way of life destroyed as fires tore through neighborhoods and schools. Today, life is about finding equilibrium in a new normal, with many still putting the pieces of their old lives back together.
“I’m very much a go-getter and a doer,” she said. “And my body is saying, ‘No, you can’t.’”
The 2025 fires cut a wide swath of destruction that the region is still grappling with. Thirty-one people died. Over 100,000 people were displaced.
School communities were hit particularly hard. More than 16,000 structures were destroyed, including eight school campuses in the Pasadena Unified School District and Los Angeles Unified.
Evacuations put both districts on hold, leading to schools grieving losses and temporarily halting instruction for roughly 12% of the state’s public schools.
In the year since the fires, both districts have been on the road to recovery, making progress on plans to rebuild and renew their communities. They have also provided support to students during the year of upheaval.
“Over the past year, the school communities devastated by the January 2025 wildfires have demonstrated extraordinary resilience and strength,” Los Angeles County Superintendent of Schools Debra Duardo told EdSource. “While the Eaton and Palisades fires tragically claimed lives, destroyed homes, and disrupted the sense of security and daily routine that students depend on, we have come together to rebuild, support each other and heal.”
Read the full article about schools' progress on recovery from the L.A. fires by Mallika Seshadri and Betty Márquez Rosales at EdSource.