Many who fled the flames were forced to make devastating choices about their pets. Some, terrified, hid or refused to leave.
The Pasadena Humane Society has created an animal rescue hotline to help pets and owners separated during the Eaton Fire.
In the aftermath of extreme wildfires erupting all over Los Angeles County, Pasadena Humane Society is taking in animals and ...
A coalition of San Diego County animal advocates — from veterinarians to foster families — have answered the call to assist ...
The Pasadena Humane Society has returned more than 150 pets to their owners after the Eaton Fire. David Schuman reports.
A man who went to a friend’s home in Altadena Calif. that was destroyed by fire spotted an injured, stray dog across the ...
Photos of a 4-month-old kitten found at a burn area in Altadena is so heartbreaking. The kitten was just one of many animals ...
Emergency response teams today from the San Diego Humane Society assisted cooperating agencies in their third day of helping ...
More than 155,000 people have been forced to flee their homes as the fires continue to burn. Many of those people have pets ...
Pets have also found themselves displaced. Local rescue organizations, including the Pasadena Humane Society, have been stepping up, sheltering hundreds of animals, and now working on reunification.
Her ears, singed. Her eyelids, swollen. As Vanessa Ortiz, a veterinary technician at the Pasadena Humane Society, picked up the kitten, she paused and reminded herself to move more gingerly.