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A group of people, including President Joe Biden, touring the aftermath of a wildfire with destroyed structures and debris in the foreground and mountains partially obscured by haze in the background.

Maxwell Alumnus Joins California Wildfire Relief Efforts

April 11, 2025

As a congressional staffer for U.S. Rep. Judy Chu, Zayn Aga lined up resources for those impacted by the devastating Eaton Fire.

In mid-January, days after the devastating Eaton Fire began in Los Angeles County, California, Maxwell School alumnus Zayn Aga ’21 B.A. (PSc) joined colleagues from the office of U.S. Rep. Judy Chu at a nearby donation drive for impacted residents.

Long lines of families turned out for support and shared their heartbreaking stories of evacuations and lost homes. Amid the sorrowful scene, Aga recalls watching a group of children playing tag and laughing in the parking lot while their mother waited in line for food and other provisions.

Group of five adults having a conversation outside a building under a canopy with a FedEx sign in the background.
Alumnus Zayn Aga ’21 B.A. (PSc) (center, suit) is shown with colleagues during a visit to fire-ravaged Altadena, California, by House Minority Leader Hakeem Jeffries (left) and several other lawmakers.

“It was just such a human moment in such a tragic, apocalyptic scenario that it just really struck me that this is something people are going to have to deal with for years, and it's real people just trying to get through it,” said Aga, who has worked as a field representative in Chu’s Pasadena office for three years.

On the first day of the Eaton fire–Jan. 7– Aga fielded calls from residents who had evacuated, who had lost their homes, and who couldn’t find family members. Some had lost loved ones in the flames. Chu's district, which covers most of northeastern Los Angeles County and serves nearly 750,000 residents, was heavily impacted by the Eaton Fire; it destroyed nearly 9,500 structures, scorched over 14,000 acres and claimed 17 lives before it was fully contained.

Aga was part of a team advocating for federal aid to support the affected community. They also assisted residents in receiving medical equipment and in recovering lost mail and other critical documents.

“It's our job and our responsibility to make government work for people,” Aga said, adding that he strives to “make government work for somebody just a little bit better and be a little bit more accessible.”

A person holds a leash attached to a white dog, both standing on a sunny pavement.
Zayn Aga found this lost dog, named Snowball, while surveying the heavily damaged neighborhoods. He was able to catch the dog and helped reunite it with its relieved owners.
Aga said he finds purpose in making a difference in small, meaningful ways. Despite evacuating his own home, he gathered supplies and drove across the city, visiting four different centers in search of one still accepting donations. One day he rounded up a lost dog and located its worried owner who had been searching since the fires.

“Helping people in a crisis, and exercising initiative and going the extra mile even when his own safety and property are being threatened, sounds so much like Zayn,” said Grant Reeher, professor of political science. “He’s the complete Maxwell package—empathy, dedication to service and determination to improve government. I’m very proud of him.”

Aga says his Maxwell schooling helped prepare him to support others in times of need, reinforcing the importance of solving problems one step at a time. He said he gained especially valuable experience interning for U.S. Sen. Charles “Chuck” Schumer and U.S. Rep. Anthony Brindisi.

“At its core, this was all just people doing their best and trying to be there for one another,” said Aga of his experience.

By Mikayla Melo 


Communications and Media Relations Office
200 Eggers Hall