Anonymous wrote:Maybe UCLA will have a delay in sending out acceptances?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:There should be almost no impact on admissions. Other than Pepperdine, not a lot of students are going to LA for Altadena or Malibu. This is more likely to have affected faculty than staff; living in the hills is a luxury. We’ve seen a lot of gofundme for students’ families, but the staff themselves mostly live in the city.
Are you in LA?
Anonymous wrote:There should be almost no impact on admissions. Other than Pepperdine, not a lot of students are going to LA for Altadena or Malibu. This is more likely to have affected faculty than staff; living in the hills is a luxury. We’ve seen a lot of gofundme for students’ families, but the staff themselves mostly live in the city.
Anonymous wrote:My son has already been LA-ified. I called him in a panic about the fires, and he started laughing and saying it’s all fine. UCLA will do that to you.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Pomona seems safe and mostly unaffected, although I imagine the air quality currently sucks. We're planning on dropping off DS next weekend.
The air quality always sucks in the inland empire whenever there’s a fire, the wind is not our friend; UCLA has better air quality than Pomona right now
+1
My DD is at Scripps and the air quality at 5Cs is often bad whenever there's a wildfire (which with climate change is often and only increasing).
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My son has already been LA-ified. I called him in a panic about the fires, and he started laughing and saying it’s all fine. UCLA will do that to you.
So cute. That's what the people of Pacific Palisades and Altadena thought. Until it happened to them.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Pomona seems safe and mostly unaffected, although I imagine the air quality currently sucks. We're planning on dropping off DS next weekend.
The air quality always sucks in the inland empire whenever there’s a fire, the wind is not our friend; UCLA has better air quality than Pomona right now
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:How often are wildfires in SoCal? If memory serves right, Claremont had a fire right next to their campus earlier this year! It feels like it’s been on constant fire.
Common out west. CA is very dry.
Very scary.
Anonymous wrote:My son has already been LA-ified. I called him in a panic about the fires, and he started laughing and saying it’s all fine. UCLA will do that to you.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:How often are wildfires in SoCal? If memory serves right, Claremont had a fire right next to their campus earlier this year! It feels like it’s been on constant fire.
Common out west. CA is very dry.
Very scary.
SoCal is very dry. NorCal has above average rainfall but the patterns are keeping the rain further north so far this year.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:How often are wildfires in SoCal? If memory serves right, Claremont had a fire right next to their campus earlier this year! It feels like it’s been on constant fire.
Common out west. CA is very dry.
Very scary.