Los Angeles Mayor Karen Bass is facing criticism after highlighting what she described as the “first Palisades fire rebuild,” a designation residents say is inaccurate, as reported by The Gateway Pundit.
Bass visited the Pacific Palisades to promote the completion of a home she presented as an early sign of recovery after last year’s wildfire, which destroyed thousands of structures across the area.
Local residents and property records indicate the showcased home was not a fire-loss rebuild but a pre-planned developer project already underway long before the fire.
According to reporting from the New York Post, the property on Kagawa Street had been purchased in early November 2024.
The owner secured a demolition permit on January 7, hours before the Palisades Fire intensified and destroyed 6,831 structures, including the original structure on the property. The teardown and construction had been scheduled well before the blaze.
After debris removal, inspections, and the city’s routine permitting steps, the new construction cleared final approval in April.
The house passed its last inspection on Friday, after which City Hall promoted it as the first official rebuild in the Palisades, despite its unrelated development timeline.
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The Post described reactions from locals who argue the mayor’s presentation of the home as a symbol of post-fire recovery is misleading.
Residents noted that the project was not representative of the families who lost homes during the wildfire and have yet to see meaningful rebuilding progress.
The New York Post headline stated: “LA Mayor Karen Bass called out for ‘phony’ Palisades rebuild after devastating wildfire.” The report detailed concerns among residents who felt the city failed to verify whether the project was connected to the fire at all.
The first completed Pacific Palisades home after the January fire is set to reopen to the community Dec. 6. The house was built as a showcase home — an advertisement of sorts for other residents looking to rebuild. https://t.co/jmQ6S8vo4O
— Los Angeles Times (@latimes) November 23, 2025
Property data confirms the reconstruction work had been initiated prior to the disaster and did not result from a fire-loss claim. The original home was already slated for demolition as part of a routine redevelopment project.
The Los Angeles Times also circulated a social media post covering the event. Critics argued the coverage left out key details regarding the home’s history, furthering confusion about whether the structure was an authentic representation of fire recovery efforts.
It has been more than ten months since the fires, during which thousands of families have awaited rebuilding progress.
According to local accounts, the city and state have yet to deliver visible, widespread reconstruction efforts in the affected neighborhoods.
The Mayor’s statement is misleading, at best.
This isn’t a Palisades rebuild, it’s a spec house with plans submitted two months before the fire. It was issued a demo permit the morning before it burned down. pic.twitter.com/Q1Re1rx1a4
— Austin Beutner (@austinbeutner) November 24, 2025
The project presented by Mayor Bass as a milestone for recovery demonstrates no link to the wildfire destruction and highlights ongoing frustration among residents who expected a more accurate accounting of reconstruction developments.
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