Some residents said Mayor Karen Bass should have canceled her trip to Ghana when weather warnings in Los Angeles grew increasingly severe.
When a series of dangerous, wind-driven fires broke out on Tuesday in the Los Angeles area, Mayor Karen Bass was on the other side of the world, part of a delegation sent by President Biden to Ghana for the inauguration of its new president.
Ms. Bass, a former Democratic congresswoman who became mayor in late 2022, did not return to Los Angeles until Wednesday afternoon, by which point more than 1,000 homes had burned and 100,000 people across the region had been forced to flee their homes.
The mayor’s absence has attracted criticism from some Angelenos. Many said there was insufficient warning from officials about the possibility of devastating fires, even as weather forecasts predicted extreme danger this week.
By Thursday last week, the National Weather Service in Los Angeles had begun warning of “extreme fire weather conditions.” By Sunday, the warnings had become even more dire — “rapid fire growth and extreme behavior with any fire starts.”
But Mayor Bass posted her first warning on X about the wind storm on Monday when she was already in Ghana. Her office did not send out a news release about fire risk until approximately 11 a.m. on Tuesday morning after the blaze in Pacific Palisades had already fallen out.
“There was zero preparation. There was zero thought here,” said Michael Gonzales, 47, whose home burnt down in Pacific Palisades, a wealthy neighborhood that overlooks the Pacific Ocean. His family of five was camped out in a hotel in Santa Monica on Wednesday as they started figuring out where they would live.
Mr. Gonzales, an attorney, said he believed Mayor Bass made a poor decision to remain overseas despite forecasters warning of the most dangerous fire conditions in more than a decade.
“It was an utter breakdown in leadership and it starts with the mayor’s office,” he said in an interview.
In her first news conference since returning to Los Angeles, Mayor Bass on Wednesday defended her administration when asked about criticisms of the city’s reaction to the fire. She said the catastrophe was the result of months of little rain and winds that had not been seen in the city for at least 14 years.
“We have to resist anyone, any effort to pull us apart,” she said.
Ms. Bass said that she returned home as quickly as she could after the fires raged through Pacific Palisades and other parts of Southern California.
“I took the quickest route back, which included being on a military plane,” she said.
Rick Caruso, a real estate developer who lost to Ms. Bass in the 2022 mayoral race, said that he had a team of private firefighters in Pacific Palisades on Tuesday night helping to protect a major outdoor retail space he owns, as well as some nearby homes. All night, he said, they were told that water was in short supply.
City officials confirmed that water tanks ran dry during the intense firefight early Wednesday in Pacific Palisades because demand surged to four times the usual rate for 15 hours. Their system, they suggested, was not designed to supply so much water in such a short period.
“The lack of water in the hydrants, I don’t think there’s an excuse,” Mr. Caruso said. “This was very predictable,” he said, referring to the forecasts that predicted the devastating windstorm.
Mr. Caruso, who served two stints as president of the Los Angeles Department of Water and Power, said that it would take time to account for why firefighters struggled to get enough water to fight the fires.
“This is a huge failure of epic proportions,” he said. “To know the storm was coming and then to leave, and not rush back.” Leadership matters and the first thing is to be present.”