Hot Springs Citizen Preparedness

Hot Springs Citizen Preparedness Emergency Management - Because it CAN happen here
(Photo above, by Mary Gordon)

The purpose of this site is to present matters in the interest of Public Safety and Preparedness in Hot Springs County, including its residents, businesses and visitors. We encourage you to submit your questions, comments, and concerns, but please note this is a moderated online discussion site and not a public forum. Once posted, Hot Springs County Emergency Management reserves the right to delet

e submissions that contain: (i) vulgar language; (ii) personal attacks of any kind; (iii) offensive comments that target or disparage any ethnic, racial, or religious group. Further, HSCEM also reserves the right to delete comments that are: (i) spam or include links to other sites; (ii) clearly off topic; (iii) advocate illegal activity; (iv) promote particular services, products, or political organizations; (v) infringe on copyrights or trademarks; (vi) use personally identifiable medical information; We recommend you not share any of your medical information on this page. Please note that the comments expressed on this site are posted by Hot Springs County Emergency Management and do not reflect the opinions and position of the Hot Springs County government or its officers and employees. If you have any questions concerning the operation of this online moderated site, please contact Hot Springs County Emergency Management at 307-864-4649

Burn scar explanation
08/29/2025

Burn scar explanation

After a wildfire, burned soil can repel water. As a result, less rainfall is required for flash flooding in areas where wildfires have recently burned.

If you live in one of these areas, and heavy rain is in the forecast, plan in advance and move away from the area.

Thank you to the Rocky Mountain team for helping our community! Red Canyon Fire Information
08/28/2025

Thank you to the Rocky Mountain team for helping our community! Red Canyon Fire Information

At 6:00 p.m. today, command of the will transition from the Rocky Mountain Complex Incident Management Team 2 (RMCIMT2) back to a local Type 4 organization led by county and local officials.

This handoff is an important milestone. With all suppression repair operations complete and no significant fire movement expected outside established containment lines, the fire no longer requires a large national team. Local agencies are ready to take over patrol, monitoring, and recovery efforts.

RMCIMT2 would like to sincerely thank the communities in the area for their partnership, patience, and support as together we worked to protect lives and property. We are also grateful to local officials and first responders who not only initiated the response but now carry the fire forward into its final phase.

Moving Forward – Local Resources
For recovery questions or continued information, please reach out to the following:

Recovery Support
- Wyoming State Wildland Recovery Grant Information: https://sbd.wyo.gov/wildfire-recovery-resource
📧 [email protected]
☎️ 307-275-6914

Information Contacts
- BLM, Worland Office: 307-347-5100 | https://www.blm.gov/office/worland-field-office
- Hot Springs County OEM: 307-864-4649 | https://www.hscounty.com/departments/emergency-management
- Hot Springs County Sheriff’s Office: 307-864-2622
- Fremont County OEM: 307-856-2374 | https://fremontcountywy.org/government/departments/emergency_management/index.php
- Fremont County Sheriff’s Office: 307-332-5611
- Washakie County OEM: 307-347-3311 | https://www.washakiecountywy.gov/homeland-security
- Washakie County Sheriff’s Office: 307-347-2242
- Wyoming Department of Forestry: 307-777-7586
- Wyoming Fish and Game Cody Regional Office: 307-527-7125

Thank you again for standing behind the firefighters and agencies throughout this incident. Your support has made all the difference.

08/26/2025

With the moving to management of a Type 4 organization, operations will look a little different. A Type 4 team is made up of local resources who can handle patrol, mop-up, and suppression repair, while continuing to monitor the fire to ensure it stays within containment lines. This transition is a positive step—it means the fire is stable enough that it no longer requires the full resources of a national Complex Incident Management Team.

That said, a Type 4 team does not have the same large staffing or logistical support that a national team brings. This means you may not see the same level of active social media updates, maps, or around-the-clock information posts. The focus shifts to safe, efficient fieldwork and ensuring the fire stays secure, with updates provided as resources allow. After 6 p.m. tomorrow, please refer to local authority social media and websites for any updates on the Red Canyon Fire.

Photo of Thank You sign coming into Thermopolis.

Red Canyon Fire containment update
08/26/2025

Red Canyon Fire containment update

Evening Operations Update: Containment on the continued to steadily increase today as crews focused on patrolling, monitoring, extinguishing hot spots, and completing suppression repair across all divisions. The only remaining heat detected was in Div. H, located within dozer berms. No aircraft were needed over the fire today, and there are no night operations planned.

Photo from the planning meeting where the next operational plan is presented to the team and agency administrators for approval.

08/24/2025

We want to extend a heartfelt thank you to Thermopolis and all of the surrounding communities who have so generously offered donations and support for those responding to the —including our partners at the Worland Air Base.
Thanks to your kindness, all needs are currently being met at both the Air Base and the Incident Command Post (ICP).

If you’d still like to give back, we encourage you to connect with your local fire departments and local agencies to learn the best ways to support them directly. Another powerful way to help is by taking steps to mitigate your own property—it not only protects your home, but also helps firefighters and strengthens your community’s resilience.

Your generosity, kindness, and community spirit continue to shine through—and we are truly grateful.

08/23/2025
08/23/2025
Evening update from Red Canyon Fire Information
08/23/2025

Evening update from Red Canyon Fire Information

Red Canyon Fire Information
08/22/2025

Red Canyon Fire Information

We understand how important grazing is to this community, and we know that changes in acreage matter. Today’s reported size of the shows a decrease of nearly 2,000 acres compared to yesterday. This reduction is not from fire activity but from more accurate mapping as fire managers continue to refine the perimeter with better data.

Crews are using a combination of day and night infrared flights, low-altitude reconnaissance, and firefighter ground reports to determine where the fire has stopped progression. In desert fuels like sagebrush, juniper, grass, and cheatgrass, fire burns quickly and intensely under sun and wind, often cooling shortly after nightfall. This makes night infrared flights less reliable, since cooled areas don’t show heat, while daytime infrared flights may overestimate burned acreage when rocks or bare soil radiate heat.

By pairing high-tech equipment with boots on the ground—what firefighters call “ground-truthing”—fire managers are creating the most accurate maps possible. Multiple day and night flights over the past several shifts have given a clearer picture, and crews have been able to confirm firing operations in Div. H, where smoke and convective heat previously limited visibility. Firefighters also tied in a dozer line, cutting off the southern section of Pack Saddle Road that had been used as a holding feature. This contributed to the adjusted acreage.

Thank you for your patience as we balance technology with firefighter expertise. Each refinement gives the community a clearer picture of the Red Canyon Fire’s true footprint on the landscape. The goal is keeping the fire footprint as small as possible to protect grazing.

Photo of zoomed in portion of the map on Div. H showing fire perimeter area where acreage was adjusted along Reck Rd.

Red Canyon Fire Information
08/22/2025

Red Canyon Fire Information

Pack Saddle Road containment information
08/21/2025

Pack Saddle Road containment information

In Div. H along Pack Saddle Road, crews successfully contained and mopped up two spot fires in the past 24 hours.

What’s a spot fire?
A spot fire happens when embers or sparks from the main fire land in unburned fuels, often outside and ahead of the main fire. They can spread quickly—sometimes miles in front of the main fire—and pose significant safety risks to firefighters and communities.

Yesterday’s unstable weather and erratic fire behavior caused these two spot fires, but thanks to coordinated efforts on the ground and in the air, crews fully mopped them up, ensuring no remaining heat sources or risk of spread.

Photo is an example of embers and sparks flying off a main fire

08/21/2025

Wildfire terms defined, thanks Washakie County Emergency Management for the great explanation!

Address

Thermopolis, WY
82443

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+13078644649

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