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LA fire victim reveals heartbreaking reason he needed home rebuilt ‘at record speed’

For nearly a year, Koerner raced against time to rebuild his home

Ted Koerner, whose home was reduced to ash in the 2025 wildfires, stands on the porch of his newly rebuilt home, alongside his dog Daisy Mae, in Altadena, Calif., Dec. 11, 2025
Ted Koerner, whose home was reduced to ash in the 2025 wildfires, stands on the porch of his newly rebuilt home, alongside his dog Daisy Mae, in Altadena, Calif., Dec. 11, 2025 (AP Photo/Jae C. Hong)

Ted Koerner feared he might never see his treasured golden retriever, Daisy Mae, playing in his backyard, under the shade of his 175-year-old Heritage Oak, again.

A year ago, as the wind-swept Eaton Fire moved in, he fled with then 12-year-old Daisy Mae, grabbing a couple pairs of sweats, long-sleeved shirts, a pillow and two pictures of the dog.

He drove away as the flames were at the end of his street in Altadena.

Koerner and Daisy Mae spent the first weeks in a hotel with hundreds of others after the Eaton and Palisades fires destroyed thousands of homes and killed 31 people. They went on walks, the hardened ash crunching beneath his feet and her paws.

"Those first few weeks were beyond devastating," he said.

He gave the builder enough money ‘to build at record speed, because I need to get home with my dog before she passes,’ he recalled
He gave the builder enough money ‘to build at record speed, because I need to get home with my dog before she passes,’ he recalled (AP)

His biggest fear was losing Daisy Mae before he could get through a daunting and costly rebuilding process. Koerner has lived alone with the 75-pound, snow white dog for 12 years. He takes her with him to restaurants — even five-star steakhouses — without a leash.

For nearly a year, Koerner raced against time to rebuild his home. He liquidated most of his retirement holdings so he could afford to hire contractors quickly while he waited for his mortgage servicing company to release his insurance payout.

He gave the builder enough money “to build at record speed, because I need to get home with my dog before she passes,” he recalled telling his mortgage servicing company early on.

“Because if she passes, I don’t want to come here. And this is a very, very, very special dog.”

The first time Koerner brought Daisy Mae after construction started, the house was framed, with a roof and openings for windows and doors.

An aerial photo shows homes destroyed in the Palisades Fire after multiple fires fueled by intense Santa Ana Winds burned across Los Angeles County leaving at least 28 dead
An aerial photo shows homes destroyed in the Palisades Fire after multiple fires fueled by intense Santa Ana Winds burned across Los Angeles County leaving at least 28 dead (Mario Tama/Getty Images)

“She walked right over to where the front door was supposed to be, went right in the house, walked around the house, walked over to what was the master bedroom sliding door, which was a great big opening, just like it would have been, and sat down and got a big smile on her face and went, ‘OK, the house is still here,’ ” he said.

Shortly before Thanksgiving, his home was among the first to be rebuilt of the thousands destroyed in the Los Angeles area wildfires a year ago. Construction took just over four months.

“I went into the house and cried a lot,” Koerner said. “It still has that effect. I’m actually home with my dog. ”

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