Firefighting Efforts Proceed as Nebraska Wildfires Burn 800,000 Acres
Hundreds of personnel deployed from Nebraska and surrounding states are working to suppress the blazes, which have collectively scorched an area more than twice the size of Rhodes Island in Greece.
"Efforts continue in response to wildfires in western Nebraska," the Nebraska State Patrol wrote on X, noting that state law enforcement superintendent Colonel Bryan Waugh had briefed US Agriculture Secretary Brooke Rollins on the crisis.
Waugh confirmed via X that the Ogallala briefing also included Nebraska Governor Jim Pillen, Agriculture Undersecretary Richard Fordyce, along with several senators and Cabinet members.
A day earlier, Secretary Rollins took to X to underscore the severity of the disaster, stating that over 800,000 acres across the entire state have burned, adding that "the scale of this devastation is something you have to see to understand."
Reporting Tuesday, Nebraska Public Media indicated that crews are gaining ground, with at least partial containment now established across all four active fire zones.
Authorities confirmed that one blaze — identified as the Morrill fire — stands as the largest ever recorded in Nebraska's history and has been linked to at least one death.
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