Los Angeles declares state of emergency as firefighters battle warehouse blaze
Los Angeles Mayor Karen Bass has declared a state of emergency as firefighters struggle to contain a blaze at a cold-storage facility in Boyle Heights. The fire, which started on June 17, spread due to a ruptured ammonia line, a flammable refrigerant that emits toxic fumes.

Briefing Summary
AI-generatedLos Angeles Mayor Karen Bass has declared a state of emergency as firefighters struggle to contain a blaze at a cold-storage facility in Boyle Heights. The fire, which started on June 17, spread due to a ruptured ammonia line, a flammable refrigerant that emits toxic fumes. This has led to ongoing smoke across the metro area, prompting shelter-in-place orders and the opening of smoke relief centers by the city and county. The emergency declaration requests expedited state relief from Governor Gavin Newsom. Firefighters are working to extinguish the remaining foam fire and address the biohazard challenges posed by approximately 85 million pounds of spoiled food within the facility.
Article analysis
Model · rule-basedKey claims
5 extractedFirefighters are dealing with the biohazard challenges of removing 85 million lbs of rotted food after the fire is extinguished.
Ammonia, a commercial refrigerant, is flammable and can emit toxic fumes, making the fire more dangerous.
A solar-panel array on a 500,000-sq-ft cold-storage facility caught fire on June 17, leading to an ammonia line rupture.
The emergency declaration is crucial because Boyle Heights residents have experienced days of smoke, shelter-in-place orders, and health concerns.
Los Angeles Mayor Karen Bass declared a state of emergency due to a warehouse fire spewing smoke across the metro area.