Fire officials are urging residents to be cautious during the open burning season in Massachusetts after wildfires cause devastation.
NORWOOD - As harrowing images of homes burning to the ground come in day after day from California, Massachusetts homeowners are understandably questioning whether they are prepared and properly insured should a catastrophe hit our coast.
As wildfires continue to cause destruction in California, people and businesses in Massachusetts are looking for ways to help victims. One restaurant in Cambridge is doing its part to support relief efforts by donating proceeds from part of their menu.
The National Weather Service's warning about the “particularly dangerous situation” in which any new fire could explode in size in the Los Angeles area didn’t mention fire tornadoes
CAMBRIDGE - As wildfires continue to cause destruction in California, people and businesses in Massachusetts are looking for ways to help victims. One restaurant in Cambridge is doing its part to ...
Donation containers are available at all Big Y registers, and one can donate with a card at the register or do so via the myExpress Checkout app, or online.
Former Massachusetts residents share their harrowing experiences escaping the devastating California wildfires, emphasizing the surreal and apocalyptic nature of the disaster.
NewsCenter 5 spoke with some Massachusetts natives who are currently in the Los Angeles area and asked them to describe what they have been witnessing from the fires.
residents across Massachusetts saw just how quickly outdoor fires can grow out of control,” said Chief Fire Warden Celino. “Right now, California is facing an even worse crisis with ...
Big Y will be collecting cash donations for American Red Cross Disaster Relief at all Big Y supermarkets in Massachusetts and Connecticut.
Natural disasters, such as wildfires and coastal flooding, raise questions about what insurance will cover (and what it won’t).
Johns Hopkins University and the California Institute of Technology agreed to settle in a federal antitrust lawsuit that alleges 17 wealthy institutions, known as the 568 Presidents Group, illegally colluded on financial aid formulas and overcharged students for years.