
Man forced to live in tent after losing Altadena home in Eaton Fire gets help from community
A community steps up when a man is forced to live in a tent after the Eaton Fire
A community steps up when a man is forced to live in a tent after the Eaton Fire
A community steps up when a man is forced to live in a tent after the Eaton Fire
An elderly man who lost his home in the Eaton Fire ended up living in a tent on his burned-out property, and his community is making sure he doesn't fall through the cracks.
It was a modest room, but for Gary Van Ostrand, it was his home.
"What's left is hardly recognizable," Van Ostrand said, looking at the rubble left of his home.
After the Eaton Fire destroyed his Altadena home, the 73-year-old lived in the shelter at the Pasadena Convention Center. But after six weeks, he was given a gift card and a tub of his belongings.
"I was told I had to go," he said.
With nowhere to go, he bought a tent and set it up in what used to be his backyard.
"There were coyotes circling around the day. The hungry coyotes, they were displaced like I was," he said.
For two weeks, he was living atop the ashes of his old home, until a passerby posted about his situation.
"This is really sad that this is how he ended up," said Ash Level, a community organizer.
Level works with Altadena Rising, a group of volunteers that connects fire victims to resources. She rushed over to Van Ostrand and they immediately connected through their love of oldies.
She said Van Ostrand's case is one of the most challenging she's seen. He's low-income, elderly, disabled, has no family, and struggles with applying for assistance.
"To be honest, I'm completely inept when it comes to doing digital things," Van Ostrand said.
Level and her team immediately took Van Ostrand to the doctor, helped him with his FEMA paperwork, and found him a hotel for another few weeks. But she said what he really needs is a long-term senior living community.
"Help us find Gary a place with light and art, other elders that want to have fun," she said.
Despite losing everything, the 73-year-old said he still has a dream to start something new, something he loves to do. Something that'll help out seniors just like him.
Van Ostrand calls it "Gary-oke" it's a group singing activity for the elderly, that he hopes will help restore memory.
"I can remember lyrics to songs I didn't even know that I remember," Van Ostrand said. "If that's true, that's a memory exercise that might help me remember what I had for breakfast."
It's an idea Level supports 100%, and she hopes others feel the same.

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Bunche Center for African American Studies, more than half of the homes lost in the Eaton Fire belonged to Black families, despite Black residents making up less than 30% of Altadena's population. Homeownership among Black residents in Altadena is 81%, nearly double the national average. 'Generations of Black families and people of color who have created an incredible cultural impact on Los Angeles have come from Altadena,' Trotter said. 'We're trying to make sure this isn't just another example of a Black community getting erased because systems weren't set up to support them.' Many of Altadena's longtime residents are elders, and helping them navigate recovery and keep the properties they hoped to pass on to their families is a key part of the coalition's mission. 'We've been working with a lot of churches in Altadena and just showing up,' to answer questions, Trotter said. The outreach has been effective because older homeowners take comfort in knowing that the group not only understands what they are going through on the surface, but also the hidden concerns and nuances that are part of the recovery process. 'They're seeing architects that look like them, that come from their culture, and so that's really been helpful for them,' Trotter said. Building on that shared experience and trust has been crucial in supporting homeowners who are overwhelmed and are feeling financial pressures to sell. 'There's a lot of fear,' Trotter said. 'Not only did I lose my home, but now there's all these people coming to us out of the woodworks, and they're telling me that they want to help me, but I don't know if they're actually trying to help me,' he said, echoing concerns from residents. Trotter said the goal is to help families rebuild, but he also acknowledges that some will inevitably sell because the mountains of paperwork, increasing cost, and the stress of it all may not be worth the time and trouble in their personal situation. 'We can't frown upon someone doing what they think needs to be done for the sake of their family,' he said. 'If a family needs to sell... we need to be able to have empathy and hold space for that, no matter how much you may want Altadena to look the same way that you remembered it when you were growing up.' As part of the coalition's program, residents receive a customized 'property package' containing aerial images of their home, zoning data, and a record of past permits. These packages have served multiple purposes for residents, helping them fill out right-of-entry forms, providing documentation for insurance claims and starting the design process for their rebuilds. 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There have been some conversations about land banking or land trusts in a way to support people who may want to sell,' he said. But Trotter said he meets all these groups with a level of caution, fueled by the residents' fear that real estate firms or outsiders may try to 'gobble up what they once knew to be their neighborhood.' He said any group he works with or presents to the community of wildfire survivors must respect Altadena's architectural and cultural history, as well as the community's yearning to simply return home. 'We do our best to do our due diligence... we always ask, like, can you do this at a discounted rate? Are you going to be volunteering and helping out in advance to help these individuals, who are residents, get back up on their feet?' Trotter said. 'We're not trying to gatekeep. We're trying to guide people who want to help to do it in a way that supports the residents here.' Even with its emphasis on protecting Black ownership and wealth in the area, the coalition offers its services to every family affected by the fire, regardless of background. 'The majority of Altadena, white and Black, and everyone in between, is interested in going back home. That's the desire of their heart,' Trotter said. Trotter said the multicultural participation in the coalition's meetings and programs reflects his group's mission to preserve Altadena's enduring sense of unity and the community's pride in its history and diverse heritage. 'What's powerful is that these residents, they're real neighbors, and they love each other, and they support each other, and they've got each other's backs,' Trotter said. 'It's not necessarily about making it all Black. It's not about making it all white. It's about returning to what makes Altadena so specifically abundant in diversity.' Visit the Altadena Rebuild Coalition page on the SoCal NOMA website or contact the coalition for support or outreach by emailing altadena@