Hollywood actress Elizabeth Chambers believes the government is not doing enough during the epidemic. There’s a fire in Los Angeles.
In an interview with Fox News Digital, Chambers, 42, was asked if she believed city officials were doing everything they could to contain the Los Angeles fires.
“I think it’s a disaster,” she said. “I don’t think anyone was prepared. I think it was on a scale that no one expected.”
California fires: Basic phone numbers for Los Angeles area residents and how to help them
Chambers shares her thoughts on billionaire real estate developer and former Los Angeles mayoral candidate Rick Caruso.
“And then Caruso saved the Village of Palisades… You can be involved in politics or not be involved in politics. But, at the end of the day, he had as much time as anyone else to prepare… I mean, it It’s strange not to be affected.”
WATCH: Elizabeth Chambers calls LA fires ‘a disaster’ and says not enough is being done
“Music is still playing in Palisades Village as if this is Disneyland and everything around is destruction. So, do I think these measures were taken appropriately and quickly enough? Absolutely not.”
Caruso unsuccessfully ran for mayor against Karen Bass in 2022. He previously said the Palisades fire, which reduced millions of dollars’ worth of real estate to ash and cut off water supplies, represented “absolute mismanagement by the city.”
“There’s no water in the Palisades. There’s no water coming out of the fire hydrants. This is definitely city mismanagement. It’s not the firefighters’ fault, it’s the city’s fault,” Caruso told reporters. Fox11 Los Angeles As the fire raged.
On January 7, deadly fires broke out in the Los Angeles area. Tens of thousands of residents had their homes and businesses destroyed and were forced to flee their homes. Officials said Thursday that more than 30 people were still missing and two others died, bringing the death toll to 27.
“So, do I think these measures were taken appropriately and quickly enough? Absolutely not.”
Chambers detailed the moment she had to evacuate, immediately packing up her and her children’s personal belongings.
“I took our passports. I took the birth certificates. I took pictures like this around the house…older family pictures,” she explained to Fox News Digital. “I was just packing for a few nights.”
Like what you’re reading? Click here for more entertainment news
The TV personality has two children with her ex-husband; amy hammer, and shared how she explains California’s tragic fires to her children, daughter Harper, 10, and son Ford, 7.
“I think when it comes to parenting, you have to be the captain of the plane… If the captain panics, the passengers will panic. That’s how I approach parenting in general,” she told Fox News Digital.
“But if the pilot of the plane doesn’t panic and say everything is fine, and you know you’re about to crash, then you don’t trust the pilot either. So, you know, it’s about transparency. It’s about having a really honest conversation and reassurance.
“You can say a lot of people are losing their homes right now. We have everything that matters. We are a family no matter what. We are healthy, we are together. We will always have a place to live, and that’s all you can say, ” she pointed out.
WATCH: Elizabeth Chambers raises funds for LA fires with charity cupcakes
Click here to subscribe to the Entertainment Newsletter
Chambers is helping to raise funds for victims of the California fires through her charity, Cupcake for a Cause.
The Bird Bakery owner will donate 100% of proceeds from the Strawberry Lemonade Cupcakes through February 1 to the Los Angeles Fire Department.
App users click here to view the post
“Over the past nearly 13 years in business, we have consistently created CUPCAKE FOR A CAUSE™️ to benefit the many tragedies and events within our community and beyond,” Chambers’ company posted on Instagram earlier this week. This time is no exception.”
“My children and I have been evacuated for the past seven days and we are still praying for the safety of our house but we are lucky. This is truly the most devastating unimaginable thing for so many people, this It’s our disaster that has the opportunity to help.”
“It’s a vanilla cake with folded strawberry slices and lemon butter buttercream,” Chambers told Fox News Digital. “We’ve sold quite a few over the past few days and the money goes directly to the Los Angeles Fire Department Foundation ”
The flavor makes sense, she noted, because 90 percent of strawberries grown in the U.S. come from California and “we’re turning lemons into lemonade.”
Click here to get the Fox News app
Fox News Digital’s Danielle Wallace contributed to this report.