LOS ANGELES (AP) — Residents anxious to see what had become of their properties after the Palisades Fire ignited on Jan. 7 waited in their cars for hours Tuesday to return to their neighborhoods after officials lifted the last remaining evacuation orders.

A line of vehicles snaked along the Pacific Coast Highway and motorists inched into a beachside parking lot in Santa Monica, where they had to show ID to receive a permit that allows them to drive into the burn zone and sift through what's left of their charred homes. They have to be out of the area by nightfall because a curfew remains in effect.

Heartbroken families, burned-out business owners and beleaguered Los Angeles leaders are beginning to ponder a monumental task: rebuilding what was lost in the Southern California wildfires.

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An aerial view of the fire damage caused by the Palisades Fire.

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Jessica Davis and Veronica Ban, with Boomer's Buddies Rescue, look for a resident's missing cat while retrieving pets for evacuated residents in an area affected by the Palisades Fire.

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