PALM BEACH GARDENS, Fla. >> Tiger Woods isn’t sure what’s going to happen with next month’s Genesis Invitational, the PGA Tour event that he hosts in the fire-ravaged Pacific Palisades neighborhood of Los Angeles.

He’s insisting there should be far bigger concerns.

Woods said Tuesday night — after his debut in the TGL indoor golf league that he helped develop — that meetings about what will happen with the tournament are scheduled, but did not reveal any decisions or suggest that the event may be moved from Riviera Country Club.

“We’re trying to just figure everything out and make sure that everyone is safe and we have meetings scheduled going forward,” Woods said. “But as of right now, we’re not really focused on the tournament. It’s more about what we can do to help everyone who’s struggling, who’s lost homes and had their lives changed.”

Woods — who grew up in Southern California — said he knows “a couple people that have lost everything.”

“It’s just hard,” Woods said.

The PGA Tour has not announced any changes to its plans to play the Genesis, scheduled for Feb. 13-16. Riviera — the host site for golf at the 2028 Olympics — sits very close to areas that have been devastated by the fires. The course itself has not been directly affected.

Tickets were still being sold Tuesday for the Genesis, though nobody knows what will happen over the next few weeks — or if it’ll even be possible to play a tournament in Los Angeles.

“There’s so many other things that are bigger than that,” Woods said. “We have subsequent meetings to try and figure all that out.”

Fires burning homes and businesses in Los Angeles for a week have killed at least 25 people, displaced thousands and destroyed more than 12,000 buildings in what might be the most expensive set of conflagrations in the nation’s history.