2025 NFL playoffs, Super Bowl odds: Seattle Seahawks are Super Bowl 60 favorites heading into playoffs for first time since 2014

The 2025-26 NFL regular season is over, as we turn attention toward the 14 teams remaining and Super Bowl LX in a few weeks in Santa Clara, California.

And as odd as it may have sounded before the season, Sam Darnold and the Seattle Seahawks are the Super Bowl favorites at sportsbooks entering the playoffs for the first time since 2014. The Seahawks opened with 60-1 odds atBetMGMto win Super Bowl 60.

Darnold led Seattle to a 14-3 record, an NFC West division title and the NFC's No. 1 seed, including a13-3 victoryon Saturday night in Week 18 over the San Francisco 49ers. The Seahawks have +400 odds to win Super Bowl 60 at BetMGM, just ahead of potential MVP Matthew Stafford's Los Angeles Rams (+425).

[Check out all of Yahoo's sports betting content here in our betting hub]

The Rams have been oddsmakers' highest power-rated team for several weeks.

One bettor at BetMGM had the foresight to place$150,000 in futures wagers on the Seahawks in August. The bettor wagered:

  • $50,000 on the Seahawks to win Super Bowl 60 at 60-1 odds to win $3 million

  • $50,000 on the Seahawks to win NFC at 28-1 odds to win $1.4 million

  • $50,000 on the Seahawks to make playoffs at +185 odds to win $92,500

The bettor would win just under $4.5 million if Seattle wins the Super Bowl.

Bo Nix and the AFC's No. 1-seeded Denver Broncos have the next-best odds at +650. The Broncos have a first-round bye and went 8-1 at home this season, although they were only 5-4 against the spread at Mile High.

The defending Super Bowl champion Philadelphia Eagles (+900) are the only other team with odds better than 10-1, and Philadelphia is a 3.5-point home favorite against the San Francisco 49ers (25-1 to win Super Bowl) in the first round.

Josh Allen's Buffalo Bills and Drake Maye's New England Patriots both have 10-1 odds, followed by the Houston Texans (13-1) and Jacksonville Jaguars (15-1). This will be the first postseason Allen has played in that won't have Patrick Mahomes, Joe Burrow and Lamar Jackson in it. Heading into Week 18, the Bills had the most wagers (10.3%) and total dollars wagered (14%) of any team to win the Super Bowl at BetMGM.

Aaron Rodgers and the Pittsburgh Steelers, who fell into a playoff spot with a26-24 win on Sunday nightafter Baltimore Ravens kicker Tyler Loop missed a potential game-winning 44-yard field goal, have the second-longest odds at 50-1. The Steelers host the Texans in the wild-card round and are 3-point home underdogs currently.

The Carolina Panthers, winners of the NFC South with an 8-9 record, have the longest odds of any NFL team to win Super Bowl 60 at 150-1.

2025 NFL playoffs, Super Bowl odds: Seattle Seahawks are Super Bowl 60 favorites heading into playoffs for first time since 2014

The 2025-26 NFL regular season is over, as we turn attention toward the 14 teams remaining and Super Bowl LX in a few ...
Giants keeping general manager Joe Schoen despite third straight losing season

The New York Giants are showing faith in general manager Joe Schoen despite another losing season. The team will retain Schoen for the 2026 NFL season despite parting ways with head coach Brian Daboll in November, the team announced.

Schoen was originally hired by the team ahead of the 2022 NFL season. After helping the team go 9-7-1 and make the playoffs in his first year on the job, Schoen has overseen a Giants franchise that has a 13-38 record over the past three seasons.

Despite that, the Giants will give Schoen another year to get things right. The team announced Monday that Schoen will lead the search for the team's next head coach.

pic.twitter.com/SPwCDlkxzi

— New York Giants (@Giants)January 5, 2026

Given the team's recent struggles, Schoen will need to make sure he finds a candidate who can immediately jell with the team's current core and turn the Giants back into winners. While Schoen was retained Monday, he could have a short leash if the Giants struggle again next season.

[Get more Giants news: New York team feed]

While Schoen's draft picks have been hit or miss, his success in 2025 may have led to him keeping the job another year. Jaxson Dart — the team's first-round pick in the draft — showed promise in his brief stint as a starter and has an intriguing dual-threat ability that could entice the team's next head coach. Prior to a devastating ankle injury, Cam Skattebo looked like an impact player at running back. Despite middling numbers, the team's other first-round pick from the 2025 NFL Draft — Abdul Carter — rated out well according to PFF's metrics. Schoen is also responsible for drafting Malik Nabers in 2024. Nabers was set for another excellent season beforegoing down with a torn ACLin Week 4.

Schoen also is responsible for selecting Deonte Banks, Tyler Nubin, Evan Neal and John Michael Schmitz in either the first or second round of recent drafts. None of those players has lived up to expectations yet, either due to on-field performance or injury.

Schoen should have another opportunity to add an impact player in the 2026 NFL Draft. Though the Giants had a shot at the No. 1 overall pick, the team pulled off a surprising upset over the Dallas Cowboys in Week 18. Because of that, the Giants will pick fifth in the 2026 NFL Draft. It's not the No. 1 overall pick, but it should still net the team an elite talent.

Following three straight miserable seasons, Schoen will need to hit on both that draft pick and the team's next head coach if he wants to remain in his role for years to come. The Giants showed faith in Schoen by bringing him back despite some rocky results, but that could erode quickly if the team's young core doesn't come together next season.

Giants keeping general manager Joe Schoen despite third straight losing season

The New York Giants are showing faith in general manager Joe Schoen despite another losing season. The team will retain S...
Raiders fire Pete Carroll after 3-14 season and will look for a new coach for third straight year

HENDERSON, Nev. (AP) — The Las Vegas Raiders fired Pete Carroll on Monday after just one year, meaning they will enter their third consecutive season with a new coach in charge.

Carroll expressed high hopes upon taking over, saying he was used to double-digit victories and expected the same in Las Vegas. But the Raiders went 3-14, going on a 10-game losing streak before finishing with a14-12 victory over Kansas Cityon Sunday.

Now the question is where the Raiders head next under the direction of owner Mark Davis, minority owner Tom Brady and general manager John Spytek. Davis said in a statement that Spytek would work with Brady to find the next coach.

"Together, they will guide football decisions with a shared focus on leadership, culture, and alignment with the organization's long-term vision and goals," Davis said.

Spytek is scheduled to meet with the media later Monday.

The Raiders are projected to have the third-most cap space at more than $100 million, according to overthecap.com.

Linebacker Devin White played with Brady at Tampa Bay, where Spytek was in the front office. All three were key parts of the Buccaneers' Super Bowl title in the 2020 season.

"I know Tom is a certified winner in the league, and John Spytek has a winning culture as far as being assistant GM in Tampa," White said. "I feel like they brought in the right players and people there to be able to go win a Super Bowl. So, hopefully, (Spytek) will take what he learned there and apply it here."

The club could seek an offensive-minded coach to work with a young quarterback should the Raiders draftHeisman Trophy winner Fernando Mendozaor Dante Moore with the first overall pick.

That formula worked well this season in Chicago withcoach Ben Johnson and quarterback Caleb Williamsand in Jacksonville withcoach Liam Coen and QB Trevor Lawrence. Both teams are playoff bound after experiencing losing seasons the year before.

There is no one path to success, however. New Englandhired a defensive coach in Mike Vrabel, and he worked well withquarterback Drake Mayeto helped the Patriots go from a 4-13 record to 14-3 and the No. 2 seed in the AFC playoffs.

"It's definitely a win for us, I guess you could say, to have the No. 1 pick," defensive tackle Jonah Laulu said. "You can't go wrong with that. Whether we use that pick or trade it for more picks, whatever it takes to help us out to win more, I'm all for it."

Running back Ashton Jeanty, who set a Raiders rookie record this season with 1,321 yards from scrimmage, went through a coaching change at Boise State. The Broncos made an in-season change two years ago,promoting Spencer Danielsonand winning back-to-back Mountain West Conference championships and appearing in last year's College Football Playoff.

"You have to be able to adapt for whoever is coming in the building," Jeanty said. "Obviously, we changed who was running Boise State and got better, so I'm hoping it will be the same thing."

Carroll, 74, was theNFL's oldest head coach, and he came to Las Vegas with the intent of winning right away. He got his wish ofbringing in quarterback Geno Smith, whom he coached in Seattle. Neither got the success they expected, with Smith throwing a league-high 17 interceptions as the losses piled up.

Thiswasn't what Carroll used to as a coach. He coached the Seahawks to a Super Bowl title and Southern California to two national championships.

But now Carroll has been dismissed, just asAntonio Pierce was last yearandJosh McDaniels midway through the 2023 season.

The Raiders have run through coaches since appearing in the Super Bowl in the 2002 season. They have made the playoffs just twice since then, losing both wild-card games.

AP NFL:https://apnews.com/hub/NFL

Raiders fire Pete Carroll after 3-14 season and will look for a new coach for third straight year

HENDERSON, Nev. (AP) — The Las Vegas Raiders fired Pete Carroll on Monday after just one year, meaning they will enter th...
Venezuela's Vice President Delcy Rodríguez  (Adriana Loureiro Fernandez  / The New York Times via Redux Pictures)

In the wake of the extraordinaryU.S. captureof Venezuelan strongman Nicolás Maduro, the international spotlight has fallen on Delcy Rodríguez, the country's interim leader and a key player in an explosive geopolitical drama.

President Donald Trump told reporters Saturday that Rodríguez had been "sworn in" as president and stood "willing to do what we think is necessary to make Venezuela great again." Rodríguez has sent mixed signals, however, insisting that Maduro remains Venezuela's "only president," while also pledging to "collaborate" with the Trump administration.

Rodríguez's de facto leadership of Venezuela caps a remarkable political ascent for an official who has served in a variety of roles under the governments of both the late socialist President Hugo Chávez and Maduro, who once called hera "tiger"for her vociferous defense of his left-wing authoritarian regime.

Here's what you need to know about Rodríguez, 56, as Maduro faces a federal indictment in the United States and the immediate fate of Venezuela hangs in the balance.

Revolutionary roots

Rodríguez was born in Caracas on May 18, 1969. She is the daughter of Marxist guerrilla fighter Jorge Antonio Rodríguez, a co-founder of the Socialist League, a militant revolutionary party that was particularly active in the 1970s.

Jorge Antonio Rodríguez was arrested in connection with his alleged involvement in the 1976 kidnapping of American businessmanWilliam F. Niehous.The elder Rodríguez died in police custody at the age of 34. The saga became a foundational memory for his daughter and one of the raisons d'etre for her political career.

"The revolution is our revenge for the death of our father and his executioners," Delcy Rodríguez wasquoted as tellinga Venezuelan politician in 2018, referring to Chávez's socialist political program.

She has close political ties with her older brother, Jorge Rodríguez, a psychiatrist by training who serves as president of the National Assembly, the country's unicameral legislature. He was the country's vice president under Chávez, who died in 2013.

Extensive resume

Rodríguez is a lawyer by training who graduated from the Central University of Venezuela in 1993. She went on to study labor law in Paris and social sciences in London before launching her Venezuelan political career in the early 2000s.

She held various low-profile positions in the Chávez regime before taking on a more visible profile as communication and information minister in 2013. Then came the job of foreign minister, from 2014 to 2017, as well as a role heading the pro-Maduro Constituent Assembly.

Rodríguez's loyalty to Maduro earned her influence and stature, according to Ryan C. Berg, the director of the Americas program at the Center for Strategic and International Studies, a Washington think tank. It was the principal reason why she was "handpicked" for the vice presidency in June 2018, making her second in the country's line of succession, Berg said.

VenezVenezuela's President Nicolas Maduro, his wife Cilia Flores, left, and then-National Constituent Assembly President Delcy Rodriguez (Ueslei Marcelino / Reuters file)

"She has survived in multiple positions because of her ability to exercise power effectively within that regime," Berg told NBC News.

In a post on social mediaannouncing Rodríguez's ascension to the vice presidency, Maduro described her as "a young woman, brave, seasoned, daughter of a martyr, revolutionary and tested in a thousand battles."

In recent years, Rodríguez added even more responsibilities to her vice presidential portfolio, taking on roles as finance and oil minister. The latter gave her oversight over Venezuela's most crucial business sector and coveted export — and tested her resolve as she attempted to deal with severe U.S. sanctions on the country's oil industry and the toll of inflation.

Rodríguez has never faced U.S. criminal charges, though she was sanctioned by the first Trump administration for the role she allegedly played in squashing political dissent in Venezuela.

Uncertainty ahead

It remains to be seen whether Rodríguez will stay in power, and the rhetoric from the leaders of both Venezuela and the U.S. has fluctuated since Maduro's stunning capture.

Trump said Saturday that Secretary of State Marco Rubio had been in contact with Rodríguez, describing her as "gracious" and willing to work with the American government as it prosecutes Maduro on narco-terrorism charges in New York.

In a televised address, Rodríguez struck a more antagonistic tone, reportedly blasting the "extremists" in the Trump administration and insisting that Maduro was Venezuela's rightful leader despite his capture and indictment by the U.S. government.

"What is being done to Venezuela is an atrocity that violates international law," Rodríguez said, according to The Associated Press.

In a post on Instagramon Sunday, Rodríguez used far more diplomatic language, emphasizing the need for a more "balanced and respectful relationship" between Venezuela and the U.S.

"We extend an invitation to the U.S. government to work together on a cooperation agenda, oriented toward shared development, within the framework of international law, and to strengthen lasting community coexistence," Rodríguez wrote in part.

Trump then presenteda stark warningto Rodríguez,telling a reporter for The Atlantic: "If she doesn't do what's right, she is going to pay a very big price, probably bigger than Maduro."

But even if Rodríguez's interim role turns into a more permanent position, she will still need to fortify her political standing inside Venezuela and what remains of the Maduro regime, according to Berg.

"She does not enjoy support from some of the main factions" in Venezuela, Berg said, "and most importantly, she'll have to consolidate support over the armed forces."

Who is Delcy Rodríguez, Venezuela's interim leader after the capture of Nicolás Maduro?

In the wake of the extraordinaryU.S. captureof Venezuelan strongman Nicolás Maduro, the international spotlight has fallen on Delcy Rodrígu...
After judge's ruling, HHS authorized to resume sharing some Medicaid data with deportation officers

NEW YORK (AP) — Thenation's health departmentstarting Monday can resume sharing the personal data of certain Medicaid enrollees with deportation officials, according to a federal judge's ruling, in a blow to statesthat had suedthe administration over privacy concerns.

But thejudge's decision, issued last Monday, strictly limits the scope of data from the 22 plaintiff states that can be shared — for now only allowing the agency to hand over basic biographical information about immigrants residing in the United States illegally. The states' lawsuit came after anAssociated Press reportidentified the data sharing policy.

The ruling from U.S. District Judge Vince Chhabria in San Francisco comes after the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services said it planned to share the data again as part of the Trump administration's immigration crackdown.

Chhabria in August hadinitially blockedthe U.S. Department of Health and Human Services from sharing the personal data, which includes home addresses, with Immigration and Customs Enforcement officers. In December, he extended that temporary order.

Then, last week, Chhabria ruled that after the temporary order expires on Jan. 5, HHS can resume sharing "basic biographical, location and contact information" about immigrants living in the U.S. illegally with Immigration and Customs Enforcement officers. He wrote in a court filing that this sharing "is clearly authorized by law and the agencies have adequately explained their decisions."

While the lawsuit plays out, HHS and CMS aren't allowed to give detailed, sensitive medical information about enrollees to the Department of Homeland Security or ICE, Chhabria wrote. They also can't hand over Medicaid data about U.S. citizens or legal immigrants in the 22 plaintiff states, he wrote.

In explaining why he blocked the broader data sharing, Chhabria wrote that the new federal policies "are totally unclear about what that information would be, why it would be needed for immigration enforcement purposes, and what the risks of sharing it with DHS would be."

It wasn't clear Monday whether HHS had resumed sharing data on Medicaid recipients living in the U.S. illegally, and a spokesperson didn't immediately respond to a request for comment.

Immigrants illegally living in the U.S., as well as some who are lawfully present, are not allowed to enroll in the Medicaid program that offers nearly free coverage for health services. But federal law requires all states to offer emergency Medicaid, a temporary coverage that pays only for lifesaving services in emergency rooms to anyone, including non-U.S. citizens. Medicaid is a jointly funded program between states and the federal government.

HHS first shared the personal data on millions of Medicaid enrollees in a handful of states in June.

In July, CMS entered into anew agreementthat gave DHS daily access to view the personal data — including Social Security numbers and home address — of all the nation's 77 million Medicaid enrollees. Neither agreement was announced publicly.

The extraordinary disclosure of such personal health data to deportation officials in the Trump administration's far-reaching immigration crackdown immediately prompted the lawsuit over privacy concerns.

Immigration advocates have said the disclosure of personal data could cause alarm among people seeking emergency medical help for themselves or their children. Other efforts to crack down on illegal immigration have made schools, churches, courthouses and other everyday places feel perilous to immigrants and even U.S. citizens who fear getting caught up in a raid.

CMS in November said its intention to provide the data to ICE is "consistent with federal laws" and intended "to advance administration priorities related to immigration."

The data sharing comes as the Trump administration has implemented an unprecedented immigration crackdown that has looped inagencies across the federal governmentand which has included sending the military and immigration agents into multiple Democratic-run cities.

The administration has also made other efforts to share data with immigration officials. In May, afederal judgerefused to block the Internal Revenue Service from sharing immigrants' tax data with ICE to help agents locate and detain people living in the U.S. illegally.

After judge's ruling, HHS authorized to resume sharing some Medicaid data with deportation officers

NEW YORK (AP) — Thenation's health departmentstarting Monday can resume sharing the personal data of certain Medicaid...
Factbox-US abortion pill access under fire: Lawsuits and regulatory battles to watch in 2026

By Daniel Wiessner

Jan 5 (Reuters) - Since the U.S. Supreme Court rolled back the constitutional right to abortion in 2022, nearly half of U.S. states have banned or severely restricted the procedure, driving a surge in medication abortion - now used in more than 60% of abortions nationwide.

That has fueled a new wave of legal battles, with Republican-led states and ​conservative groups pressing to curb access to the abortion drug mifepristone, while providers and Democratic-led states push to expand it. Here's a look at the key lawsuits and regulatory fights whose ‌outcomes could impact access to the drug in the year ahead:

LAWSUITS SEEKING TO RESTRICT ACCESS

Six Republican-led U.S. states in three separate pending lawsuits are seeking to curb access to mifepristone, the first of two pills used for medication abortion in the first 10 ‌weeks of pregnancy. Louisiana sued in October, challenging a 2023 regulation allowing for the drug to be prescribed remotely and dispensed through the mail. In December, Texas and Florida filed a broader legal challenge targeting the U.S. Food and Drug Administration's initial approval of mifepristone in 2000 and several subsequent approvals and regulations that eased access. The three states had sought to join a separate case by Missouri, Kansas and Idaho, but a judge in Texas in September said that request was moot when he transferred the lawsuit to St. Louis federal court. The Missouri lawsuit was first filed in 2022 by anti-abortion groups and doctors, but the U.S. Supreme Court ⁠in 2024 found they did not have the necessary legal standing to ‌challenge the FDA's regulation of mifepristone. The states, which had intervened in the case, are pressing forward with arguments that the FDA acted improperly when it eased restrictions on mifepristone in 2023.

STATES SEEKING TO EXPAND ACCESS

Meanwhile, physicians and medical groups are challenging FDA rules also adopted in 2023 requiring providers and pharmacies to be ‍certified to prescribe and dispense mifepristone and to obtain a signed authorization from patients. They claim the restrictions are unwarranted because mifepristone is safe and effective. A group of Democratic-led states had sued over those rules but a judge in Washington state dismissed the case in July and the states did not appeal.

In a case brought by abortion providers, a federal judge in Hawaii ruled in October that the FDA had failed to explain why the dispensing requirements were ​necessary and directed the agency to reconsider them, but said the rules would remain in place in the meantime. A judge in Virginia is expected to rule soon in a similar case. Four ‌Democratic-led states have filed a petition urging the FDA to remove the restrictions.

Separately, at least three lawsuits are pending that challenge state laws limiting access to mifepristone despite its approval on the federal level. A Virginia-based federal appeals court in July rejected a challenge to West Virginia's abortion ban by drugmaker GenBioPro, and is now considering how that ruling will impact a case involving a North Carolina law placing various restrictions on medication abortion. A challenge to a Louisiana law designating mifepristone as a dangerous controlled substance is moving forward after a state judge in June denied the state's motion to dismiss the case.

SHIELD LAWS

More states could move to limit access to mifepristone by prosecuting out-of-state doctors who prescribe it within their borders. In an unprecedented interstate conflict, the Texas Attorney General's office in July asked a New York state court to ⁠order a New York county to enforce a $100,000 judgment against a doctor for sending abortion pills to Texas. The ​case will test New York's so-called shield law precluding the enforcement of other states' abortion bans against New Yorkers. About 20 ​other states have similar laws.

Texas and Louisiana also passed laws in 2025 allowing private citizens to sue anyone who mails or distributes abortion medication to or from the state.

REGULATORY ACTION

President Donald Trump's administration has sent mixed signals on its stance on mifepristone, launching a safety review of the drug earlier in 2025 while also approving a ‍new generic version in October, which it was required to ⁠do by federal law. The administration has also pushed forward with the defense of the 2023 rules allowing prescriptions through the mail. And the FDA in December delayed the safety review until after the November 2026 midterm elections, according to a report by Bloomberg. The agency in response said it was taking the time needed to conduct a comprehensive scientific review.

The review delay ⁠and approval of the new generic have angered many conservatives and anti-abortion groups. Missouri, Kansas and Idaho are challenging the approval as part of their broader lawsuit, and some Republican lawmakers have called on the FDA to complete the review.

The Center for ‌Reproductive Rights and the ACLU have filed separate lawsuits seeking to force the release of documents related to the scope of the safety review and the sources of information ‌the FDA is considering.

(Reporting by Daniel Wiessner in Albany, New York, Editing by Alexia Garamfalvi and Bill Berkrot)

Factbox-US abortion pill access under fire: Lawsuits and regulatory battles to watch in 2026

By Daniel Wiessner Jan 5 (Reuters) - Since the U.S. Supreme Court rolled back the constitutional right to aborti...
Sarah Reingewirtz/MediaNews Group/Los Angeles Daily News via Getty Images

On Jan. 7, 2025, people across the Los Angeles area watched in horror as powerful winds began spreading wildfires through neighborhood after neighborhood. Over three weeks, the firesdestroyed more than 16,000 homesand businesses. At least31 peopledied, and studies suggest the smoke and stress likely contributed tohundreds more deaths.

For many of us who lived through the fires, it was a traumatic experience that also brought neighborhoods closer together. Neighbors scrambled tohelp each otheras burning embers started spot fires that threatened homes. They helpedelderly and disabled residents evacuate.

Robert Gauthier/Los Angeles Times via Getty Images

As the LA region rebuilds a year later, many people are calling for improvements tozoning regulations,building codes,insuranceandemergency communications systems. Conversations are underway about whether rebuilding in some locationsmakes sense at all.

But managing fire risk is about more than construction practices, regulations and rules. It is also about people and neighborliness – the ethos and practice of caring for those in your community, including making choices and taking steps on your own property to help keep the people around you safe.

Zoe Meyers/AFP via Getty Images

As LA-area residents andhistorianswhowitnessedthe fires' destruction and have been following the recovery closely, we believe building a safer future for fire-risk communities includes increasing neighborliness and building shared knowledge of the past. Much of that starts in the schools.

Neighborliness matters in community fire safety

Being neighborly means recognizing the connectedness of life and addressing the common good, beyond just the individual and family network.

It includescommunity-wide fire mitigation strategiesthat can help prevent fires from spreading.

During the Southern California fires, houses, fences, sheds, roofs and dry vegetation served as the fuel for wind-blown fires racing through neighborhoods miles away from forested land. Being neighborly means taking steps to reduce risks on your own property that could put your neighbors at risk. Following fire officials' recommendations can meanclearing defensible spacearound homes, replacing fire-prone plants and limiting or removing burnable material, such as wood fencing and sheds.

AP Photo/Jae C. Hong

Neighborliness also recognizes the varyingmental health impactsof significant wildfire events on the people who experience them. Being neighborly means listening to survivors and reaching out, particularly to neighbors who may be struggling or need help with recovery, and building community bonds.

Neighbors are often the first people who can help in an emergency before local, state and federal responders arrive. A fast neighborhood response, whether helping put out spot fires on a lawn or ensuring elderly residents or those without vehicles are able to evacuate,can save lives and propertyin natural disasters.

Fire awareness, neighborliness start in school

Community-based K-12 schools are the perfect places for learning and practicing neighborliness and providing transformative fire education.

Learning about thelocal history of wildfires, from the ecological impact of beneficial fire to fire disasters and how communities responded, can transform how children and their families think about fires and fire readiness.

However, in our view, fire history and safety is not currently taught nearly enough, even in fire-prone California.

AP Photo/Richard Vogel

California's Department of Education Framework and Content Standards for K-12 education offer several opportunities to engage students with innovative lessons about wildfire causes, preparedness and resilience. For example,fourth grade history and social sciencestandards include understanding "how physical environments (e.g., water, landforms, vegetation, climate) affect human activity." Middle school science standards includemapping the history of natural hazards, though they only mention forest fires when discussing technology.

Schools could, and we believe should, include more fire history, ecological knowledge and understanding of the interconnectedness of neighborhoods and neighbors when it comes to fire safety in those and other classes.

Elementary schools in many states bring in firefighters to talk about fire safety, often through programs run by groups like theCalifornia Fire Prevention Organization. These efforts could spend more time looking beyond house fires to discuss how and where wildfires start, how they spread and how to make your own home and neighborhood much safer.

Models such as the U.S. Fire Administration's collaboration with Sesame Workshop on theSesame Street Fire Safety Programfor preschool kids offer examples, blending catchy phrases with safety and science lessons.

Including knowledgefrom Indigenous tribal elders, fire management professionals and other community members can provide more robust fire education and understanding of the roles people play in fire risk and risk reduction. Introducing students tofuture career pathwaysin fire safety and response can also help students see their roles in fire safety.

As LA recovers from the 2025 fires, fire-prone states can prepare for future fires by expanding education about fire and neighborliness, and helping students take that knowledge home to their families.

Remembering, because it will happen again

Neighborliness also demands a pivot from thereflexive amnesiaregarding natural and unnatural disasters to knowing that it will happen here again.

There's a dangerous, stubborn forgetfulness in the vaunted Land of Sunshine. It is all part ofthe myththat helped make Southern California such a juggernaut of growth from the late 19th century forward.

The region was,boosters and public officials insisted, special: a civilization growing in the benign embrace of the environment. Anything grew here, the endless Los Angeles Basin could absorb everyone, and if therewasn't enough waterto slake the thirst of metropolitan ambitions, engineers and taxpayers would see to it that water from far away – even very far away – would be brought here.

The Southland is beautiful, but a place can be both beautiful and precarious, particularly in the grip of climate change. These are lessons we believe should be taught in K-12 classrooms as an important step toward lowering disaster risk. Living with fire means remembering and understanding the past. That knowledge, and developing more neighborly behavior, can save your life and the lives of your neighbors.

Elizabeth A. Logan, Associate Director of the Huntington-USC Institute on California and The West, USC Dornsife College of Letters, Arts and Sciences

William Deverell, Professor of History, USC Dornsife College of Letters, Arts and Sciences

LA fires showed how much neighborliness matters for wildfire safety – schools can do much more to teach it

On Jan. 7, 2025, people across the Los Angeles area watched in horror as powerful winds began spreading wildfires through neighborhood afte...

 

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