By Los Angeles County Politics (LACP)
Los Angeles County Supervisor Kathryn Barger (R-Northern LA County, including Palmdale, Lancaster, Santa Clarita, San Marino, Pasadena, La Cañada-Flintridge, portions of the San Gabriel Valley) this week marked the conclusion of her year as Chair of the Board of Supervisors, highlighting a year defined by historic challenges, unprecedented wildfire recovery, and major fiscal pressures across County services.
During her end-of-term Chair remarks at the Board of Supervisors meeting, Barger reflected on the strength of regional partnerships and the resilience of County departments, community organizations, and residents.

“When I took the gavel a year ago, I acknowledged I didn’t know what the year ahead would hold,” said Barger. “That turned out to be an understatement, to say the least. What I did know, and what this year reaffirmed, is that whatever 2025 brought our way, we’d get through it together.”
Barger emphasized that much of 2025 was shaped by the aftermath of the January Los Angeles Wildfires—one of the most devastating disasters in County history. Within days of the fires, the County launched Disaster Recovery Centers to help displaced residents access temporary housing, food, clothing, medical care, and assistance from federal, state, and local agencies.
The recovery saw the Board of Supervisors oversee the distribution of more than $27 million in County emergency relief grants to support residents, workers, small businesses, and nonprofits. The County also partnered with FEMA and the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers to carry out an extraordinary debris-removal mission, enabling rebuilding to begin just months later.
As of this week, more than 2,550 residents have filed rebuilding permits in Altadena and the Palisades, and over 800 permits have already been issued—allowing families to break ground and begin constructing their new homes.
Additionally, County staff remain in the field, continuing to support survivors at One-Stop Centers with rebuilding guidance, employment assistance, and access to financial resources. Some households are nearing the final stages of construction and may even spend the holidays in their rebuilt homes.
“As we enter the next phase of recovery, my commitment is unwavering. We must equip residents with every resource available. I’m determined to keep this momentum going,” said Barger.
Barger also reviewed the extraordinary financial challenges the County confronted this year, including nearly $5 billion in pending child sexual abuse settlements, more than $800 million in wildfire-related costs, and federal funding reductions that are already reshaping essential programs. The federal government shutdown added further strain for families who rely on safety-net programs to meet basic needs.
Despite these pressures, the County reached a tentative agreement on salaries and benefits with its labor partners.
Barger expressed deep appreciation for the County’s workforce and departmental leadership for their dedication to maintaining critical services and improving operational efficiency during a difficult fiscal climate. She also emphasized that supporting the County’s workforce is key to delivering consistent, high-quality services well into the future.
Barger also highlighted numerous initiatives that advanced the Board’s people-centered priorities. This included creating the new Department of Homeless Services and Housing, which is designed to streamline and strengthen the County’s homelessness response system.
Other accomplishments included supporting veterans and their families through the launch of a new Arts and Veterans Center, expanding spay-and-neuter services to protect animals, hiring more veterinarians and animal care officers, combating illegal breeding operations, reducing overcrowding in care centers, and increasing pet adoption efforts.
Barger also thanked the County’s workforce for all their hard work and dedication.
“None of this happened overnight, and none of it happened in isolation,” said Barger. “Each person on this dais, and each member of our 100,000-strong County workforce, played a pivotal role.”
Barger will continue representing the Fifth Supervisorial District as the Board enters 2026.









