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Wildfire evacuations lifted, roads open, over 130,000 acres burned

Wildfires continue plaguing much of western and central Nebraska in a more active fire season than the area has seen in recent memory.
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Photo courtesy Nebraska Forest Service

NORTH PLATTE, Neb. (KNOP) - Wildfires continue plaguing much of western and central Nebraska in a more active fire season than the area has seen in recent memory.

In the fight to keep neighbors safe, one Cambridge man has given his life. Family members say he was going from house to house telling people to leave and get to safety when his vehicle got stuck, and he could not get away fast enough on foot.

As of 10:00 a.m., Sunday, all wildfire evacuations have been lifted, according to the Nebraska Forest Service. They ask that people remain cautious due to blowing dirt and smoke still in the areas affected, sometimes causing dangerous driving conditions.

Wildfires that began Friday swept quickly from the Kansas board (Road 702 Fire) moving north toward Cambridge and other nearby communities, being fueled by high winds and dry grass. Towns on standby for evacuation, voluntary evacuation, and mandatory evacuation throughout the event.

Wildfires have been reported in at least 12 of the state’s counties since Friday. On Saturday, firefighters were battling them in Perkins, Hayes, Furnas, Red Willow, and Frontier counties, according to the Nebraska Emergency Management Agency. A fire north of Curtis, Saturday afternoon had local rural departments responding. That fire was dealt with by late Saturday afternoon. In Perkins County, volunteers continue working to keep the fire there from spreading.

Between dry air, high wind, and a storm with little rain and lots of lighting, the complex wildfire systems have exhausted those fighting to get it under control. Tiffany Hock, a firefighter with Holbrook Volunteer Fire Department, says everyone is exhausted.

The Nebraska National Guard deployed one hand crew, two UH-60 Blackhawk helicopters, one UG-72, and several ground-support trucks to help put out the fires, and the Wildland Incident Response Team sent specialists, the emergency management agency said on Saturday, all with help seriously needed by volunteer firefighters who live and work in these fire zones. 

Incident Command is set up in Cambridge at the Fire Hall. Donations can be taken there.