Nov 7 2025
Los Angeles County Post-Fire Air, Soil, and Water Assessment Dashboard

New Environmental Assessment Results Available on

PostFire Dashboard

The Los Angeles County PostFire Air, Soil, and Water Assessment Dashboard is updated continually as new assessment results are made available. Residents are encouraged to check the dashboard regularly for updates. Changes are highlighted in the “Latest Updates” section on the homepage.

Key updates made since mid-September are summarized below:

1. Soil Testing at Charles White Park by the Los Angeles County Department of Parks & Recreation and Mayfield Environmental Solutions

Added new section with results from soil testing conducted in September at Charles White Park in Altadena.

2. Indoor Contaminant Testing and Outdoor Ash Testing by the California Department of Public Health (CDPH)

Updated two sections with new results from CDPH and UCSF outlining which chemicals were found in indoor dust and outdoor ash.

3. Eaton Fire Soil Testing Program by Los Angeles County Department of Public Health

Updated data showing results of soil lead testing through October 2025.

4. Blood Lead Level Monitoring by Los Angeles County Department of Public Health

Updated data showing results of blood lead testing through October 2025.

5. Outdoor Air Monitoring by California Institute of Technology (Caltech)

Updated section to add links to the PHOENIX air quality map and a summary of initial findings from data collected through April.

6. AirSoil, and Pool Testing by Community Action Project Los Angeles (CAP.LA)

Added three new sections with information on air monitoring, soil testing, and pool water quality testing conducted by the CAP.LA collaborative research project.

7. Debris Removal Air Monitoring by the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers

Added new section with results from daily air monitoring around cleanup activities in both the Eaton and Palisades Fire areas.

8. Residential Soil Testing by Chapman University

Added new section with results from lead testing conducted in February-April in soil from 20 residential properties in and around the Eaton Fire area.

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