Nebraska activates smoke advisory system

LINCOLN – The Nebraska Department of Health and Human Services has activated the Nebraska Smoke Advisory System for 2025.
Advisories will be based on air quality monitors in Omaha, Blair, Bellevue, Lincoln, Beatrice, Grand Island and Scottsbluff, as well as notification of controlled burns likely to impact air quality. Smoke from wildfires can also impact air quality.
Advisories will be posted on the Department of Environment and Energy website, as well as the health department.
AirNow.gov provides an air quality index across the country. AirNow has a monitor near Weeping Water and the Nebraska Panhandle.
Here is the health and human services press release
Smoke Advisory System Activated for 2025
Lincoln, NE – Nebraska's Smoke Advisory System has been activated for 2025.
The Nebraska Department of Health and Human Services (DHHS) implemented the public smoke advisory system in 2018. Smoke advisories will be issued when conditions make it likely the smoke from prescribed burning or wildfires could significantly affect air quality in parts of the state.
DHHS reminds Nebraskans the prescribed burning season is underway in Kansas, Oklahoma, and other states in the region, including Nebraska. Smoke from wildfires in the west and Canada, which have occurred often in the recent past, also can compromise the air quality in Nebraska.
DHHS issues advisories in partnership with the Nebraska Department of Environment and Energy (NDEE), local health departments and districts, and the National Weather Service using information provided by other sources in the region.
Impacts on air quality may vary based on the type, size, and location of fires. Impacts from prescribed burning may only last a few hours. Wildfire smoke can be persistent over consecutive days. Many factors, including weather conditions, affect the magnitude and duration of air quality impacts.
If state and local agencies determine that smoke is likely to significantly impact the air quality in Nebraska, DHHS and NDEE will issue a joint advisory to share the information with the public. Advisories will be based on data provided by multiple sources in the region as well as smoke plume modeling and data from air quality monitors located in Omaha, Blair, Bellevue, Lincoln, Beatrice, Grand Island, and Scottsbluff. Advisories will be posted on the NDEE website at https://dee.nebraska.gov/news-events/press-releases, the DHHS website at http://dhhs.ne.gov/pages/news-releases.aspx, and on DHHS and NDEE social media accounts.
In addition to advisories from DHHS and NDEE, the Lincoln-Lancaster Health Department and the Douglas County Health Department may also issue information to advise citizens of air quality impacts in their jurisdictions.
Smoke can cause health problems, including burning eyes, runny nose, coughing, and illnesses such as bronchitis. Children and older adults as well as individuals with respiratory issues, such as asthma or COPD, pre-existing heart, or lung diseases, may experience more severe symptoms.
How Nebraskans can protect their health on days when smoke is present in their communities:
- Keep doors and windows closed and run air conditioners with high-efficiency particulate air (HEPA) filters.
- Stay hydrated by drinking plenty of water.
- Limit or avoid strenuous outdoor exercise.
- People with respiratory or heart-related illnesses should remain indoors.
- Contact your doctor if you have symptoms such as chest pain, chest tightness, shortness of breath, or severe fatigue.
For current conditions of Nebraska's air quality, visit https://www.airnow.gov/. For information on current fires, smoke, and air quality conditions at monitors and sensors throughout the state, visit https://fire.airnow.gov/.
AirNow is a tool that uses the Air Quality Index (AQI) to report air conditions across the country. The AQI uses the following color chart to quickly communicate air quality.