A massive fire at a historic hangar in Tustin, Orange County has led to the closure of more than a dozen schools in the Tustin Unified School District. The fire has also caused a crisis at an animal shelter, prompting a call for volunteers to take in dogs due to air-quality concerns. The fire's impact is highlighted in a column by Gustavo Arellano, who criticizes Orange County for neglecting its history for financial gain.
Animal shelter near smoldering hangar in Tustin asks for volunteers to take in dogs amid air-quality concerns https://t.co/AvLJTRsKzZ
An O.C. animal shelter is in crisis and in need of fosters following a massive fire that destroyed a nearby hangar in Tustin. https://t.co/G0AhS8HDxN
An Orange County animal shelter is in crisis and in need of fosters following a massive fire that destroyed a nearby hangar. https://t.co/G0AhS8HDxN
.@GustavoArellano's latest column for @latimes says the burning hangar in Tustin represents a larger problem for Orange County. On @foxla, he told us OC is letting its history "rot" in order to make $$. Read his work here: https://t.co/0wN2Ddtd2a https://t.co/uG73EuYy2n
On of my favorite rescues @WonderDogRescue is moving to New York. Donations are down and so are adoptions from rescues — people keep buying from breeders, leaving 4 million animals to die in shelters each year (37% of them are purebreds). https://t.co/wLEIpIxJPj https://t.co/GtzlQ45dFD
More than a dozen schools in the Tustin Unified School District will reopen on Wednesday, as flare-ups continue to burn at the historic hangar a week after the initial blaze. https://t.co/ONIgAGquPl https://t.co/Pmi3RhAdGm