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A truck filled with dirt leaves Devil’s Gate Dam reservoir as Los Angeles County Public Works begins removing 1.7 mil cubic yards of sediment from behind the Pasadena dam on Tuesday, May 21, 2019.
On my list of alarming forces in L.A., Devil’s Gate lags far behind earthquakes, wildfires and the Santa Ana winds. That said, you’ll never catch me there at night—and certainly not alone again.
The hauling of 25 years of sediment has begun at Devil’s Gate Dam in northwest Pasadena. The project will take roughly four years at 425 truck round trips a day.
The removal of 25,000 cubic yards of sediment from the basin behind Devil’s Gate Dam in Pasadena has been put on hold until August in order to prevent the destruction of a habitat for toads.
After lengthy legal battle, Pasadena groups… Share this: Click to share on Facebook (Opens in new window) Click to share on Twitter (Opens in new window) ...
(KTLA) – A teen girl who reportedly suffered an overdose in the area of Devil’s Gate Dam reservoir in Pasadena had to be airlifted out of the canyon Thursday, officials announced. At around 3: ...
Pasadena directors took umbrage at that statement and voted 7-0 to authorize their city manager to file the necessary paperwork ... the reservoir at Devil’s Gate Dam was filled. The total ...
Residents of 19th century Pasadena must have delighted in the mild irreverence of a picnic at Devil’s Gate—a name suggesting a fiery hellmouth rather than the picturesque gorge that it was.
The controversial Devil’s Gate Dam sediment removal project is concluding a year earlier than expected. More work remains to be done on the project’s planned habitat restoration efforts, but ...
The hauling of 25 years of sediment has begun at Devil’s Gate Dam in northwest Pasadena. The project will take roughly four years at 425 truck round trips a day.
A teen girl who reportedly suffered an overdose in the area of Devil’s Gate Dam reservoir in Pasadena had to be airlifted out of the canyon Thursday, officials announced. This report aired on ...