Indian River County Lifts Burn Ban After Rainfall Eases Fire Risks

Officials allow residents to resume controlled outdoor burns for agriculture and debris under ongoing Florida Forest Service regulations.

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Indian River County Lifts Burn Ban After Rainfall Eases Fire Risks
Illustration by Priya Okafor / TC Sentinel

Indian River County officials have lifted an outdoor burn ban, citing recent rainfall that improved fire-danger conditions across the county.

Residents and property owners who rely on controlled outdoor burning — including agricultural operations, land clearing, and debris disposal — may resume those activities under the standard open-burning regulations set by the Florida Forest Service. The ban's end does not suspend those baseline rules, which remain in effect year-round.

Sufficient rainfall in the area prompted officials to determine the threat had subsided enough to lift the restriction. The burn ban had been in place as dry conditions elevated the risk of wildfires spreading across the county.

Indian River County property owners are reminded that even with the ban lifted, outdoor burning requires compliance with state guidelines, including time-of-day restrictions and burn-pile size limits. Conditions can change rapidly, and a new ban could be reinstated if dry weather returns.

WHAT TO DO: Residents with questions about current burn regulations or fire-danger conditions in Indian River County should contact the Indian River County Emergency Management office at (772) 226-4000 or visit the Florida Forest Service's online burn authorization tool at fdacs.gov before starting any outdoor fire. For general emergencies, call 911.

This article was generated with AI assistance using publicly available information. It was reviewed and approved by a human editor before publication. TC Sentinel uses AI writing tools in accordance with FTC guidelines.

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