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L.A. County Supervisors back Newsom's $39B request for wildfire aid

burned homes in malibu
An aerial view of repair vehicles at sunset passing near beachfront homes that burned in the Palisades Fire as wildfires cause damage and loss through the LA region on January 15, 2025 in Malibu, California.
Mario Tama/Getty Images

The Los Angeles County Board of Supervisors Tuesday officially backed Gov. Gavin Newsom's $39.6 billion request to the federal government to fund recovery efforts for the January wildfires.

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On Feb. 21, Newsom sent a letter to the House of Representatives outlining the city, county and state's financial needs to support the immediate and long-term recovery of impacted communities.

The supplemental request, estimated at about $39,680,737,878, would support business and workforce recovery, tax incentives, community and private property recovery and disaster resilience, according to Tuesday's motion by Board Chair Kathryn Barger.

On Jan. 23, the board sent a letter to President Donald Trump requesting financial and legislative support, and the county has also submitted a Supplemental State Budget Request for fiscal year 2025-2026 seeking $900 million.

"The needs and opportunities delineated in Governor Newsom's letter outline the challenges and necessary investments the County is seeing each day," Tuesday's motion said.

"While the County commits significant resources towards leading the recovery of impacted communities, this supplemental funding is critical to sustaining vital public services, including child and family services, healthcare, libraries, public works, solid waste management, and parks and recreation," it continued.

Barger's motion also highlighted support from Trump and federal resources in assisting the post-fire cleanup efforts.

"It is evident that the County, State, and Federal agencies are committed to eliminating any bureaucracy that will slow down rebuilding," the motion added, stating the county had prioritized the tactical, transparent and efficient deployment of all resources.

The board voted 5-0 Tuesday to send a five-signature letter to congressional leadership, with a copy to the Los Angeles County House and Senate delegation.

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