While the firefight continues in Los Angeles, so far torching hundreds of homes and leaving countless people without a place to stay, recovery efforts and donations are in full swing. Global icon Beyoncé joined those efforts on Monday with a massive $2.5 million donation on behalf of her foundation BeyGOOD
Beyoncé donates $2.5 million to rebuild Altadena, a historically Black community devastated by wildfires. Supporting community resilience.
Through Beyoncé's foundation, BeyGOOD, the newly created LA Fire Relief Fund will provide resources to families who lost their homes.
Beyoncé has pledged $2.5 million to helping those impacted by the ongoing wildfires devastating the Los Angeles area, she announced Sunday via the Instagram page for her charitable foundation, BeyGOOD.
As crews continue working on containing the fires that have decimated parts of California, residents have banded together to help their own in a time of need. Beyoncé’s BeyGOOD Foundation, like other nonprofits,
However, late Monday night, the singer announced on Instagram that she is delaying her announcement due to the devastation caused by the wildfires in Southern California ... is earmarked to aid families in the Altadena/Pasadena area who lost their homes ...
Weaker winds and intense firefighting efforts over the weekend boosted containment of fires burning in and around Los Angeles, but the effects of the blazes on the entertainment world continue.
Southern California has faced devastating fires in recent days and Beyoncé's charity BeyGOOD has now announced its LA Fire Relief Fund to support families affected by them
At least 24 people have died as Los Angeles is being ravaged by multiple fires that are scorching vast swaths of the city, while firefighters work to contain the massive Palisades fire as well as Eaton fire in Altadena. On Saturday night, the California ...
According to reports, Altadena is known as California's first middle-class Black community. During the Great Migration, the area served as a refuge for Black Americans to flee the Jim Crow South. Altadena offered Black families a chance to acquire land ...
After her business was spared from the Eaton Fire, Adriana Molina is searching for ways to help her beloved community rebound from one of the worst disasters in California history. "How can I serve the community that is here," she said. "The community that wants to rebuild."
Under mandatory evacuation, Jones and several other Altadena residents were met by yellow caution tape and National Guard and California Highway Patrol personnel. Frustrated and unable to reach ...