Videos from the 2025 fires in Southern California show the enormous scale of the destruction and the considerable damage left behind across many affected areas. Entire neighborhoods, businesses, roadways, utility corridors, and critical infrastructure were impacted, creating extremely challenging conditions for residents, emergency personnel, and service providers working throughout the region. The footage serves as a powerful reminder of how quickly wildfires can change lives and communities, and how important dependable communication becomes when conditions are dangerous, unpredictable, and rapidly evolving.
Even with difficult field conditions, ongoing safety concerns, limited access to certain locations, and widespread disruption caused by smoke, fire activity, power outages, and damaged infrastructure, our teams were still out in the field working to keep the network running. Technicians and support staff continued assessing sites, monitoring system performance, responding to outages, and coordinating repairs wherever it was safe and possible to do so. Their work required careful planning, constant communication, and a strong commitment to maintaining service in areas where reliable connectivity was essential.
Maintaining connectivity during emergencies is critical. During a wildfire, communication networks help first responders coordinate resources, support evacuation efforts, share urgent updates, and stay connected with command centers and partner agencies. They also help local businesses, public safety teams, utility crews, and residents access the information they need during moments of uncertainty. In situations where every second can matter, a dependable network is more than a convenience—it is an important part of emergency response and community resilience.
Throughout the response to the 2025 Southern California fires, we remained committed to supporting the communities, first responders, and customers who were depending on reliable communication. While the damage left behind was significant, our focus remained on helping maintain continuity, restoring service where interruptions occurred, and doing our part to support recovery efforts across the affected areas. We are grateful for the dedication of the crews working under difficult circumstances and for the first responders and community members who continue to show strength, coordination, and resilience in the face of such a devastating event.
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This morning power is out at:
Crestline
Hauser
Saddle
Castro
Heaps
Lukens
Looks like power was restored at Box Springs
The view from Mount Lukens
https://www.airsites2000.com/Cameras/LUGatePTZ.jpg