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Vol. I · No. 178 · 1662 Reports Sunday, June 28, 2026
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CBS segment on Utah wildfires, Kentucky floods largely accurate with minor size note

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Topics in This Edition

Utah wildfiresKentucky floodingWestern wildfiresUS Forest Service

Summary

The segment covers a state of emergency in Kentucky from thunderstorms and flooding with one reported death, alongside Utah's state of emergency for multiple wildfires including the Cottonwood fire. It details the fire's rapid growth to nearly 100,000 acres, evacuations including at Eagle Point ski resort, governor's assessment as the state's most destructive for property loss, and new fires overnight. Reporting shifts to US Forest Service staffing after recent cuts, with comment from Washington state's public lands commissioner, then broader severe weather and heat alerts across regions.

Editorial Assessment

Claims align closely with primary updates from USFS, state officials, and news outlets on fire size, timing, containment, and declarations. Acreage cited as 'nearly 100,000' slightly exceeds mapped figures around 92,000 but reflects rapid overnight growth reported. Workforce reduction and 'fully staffed' assertions match administration statements and coverage of ~6,000 cuts. Viewers miss detailed data on property damage totals or specific new fire ignitions beyond the main blaze. Framing emphasizes expanding western fire activity and resource concerns without counterbalancing federal response details.

Key Moments

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Cottonwood fire scorched nearly 100,000 acres and is the nation's largest

Mapped at ~92,254 acres on June 27 with 0% containment; confirmed as largest active U.S. fire

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Utah governor calls it the most destructive wildfire in state history for property loss

Gov. Cox statements match reports citing it as likely most destructive/costly for property

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US Forest Service fully staffed after cutting 6,000 employees over the last year

Agency lost ~5,900-6,000 staff via buyouts/layoffs; later stated fully staffed for season

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State of emergency declared in Kentucky due to thunderstorms and flooding with at least one death

Gov. Beshear declared emergency; widespread flash flooding and severe weather confirmed

Sources Consulted

  1. Utah declares emergency, limits fireworks ahead of July Fourth as crews battle largest U.S. wildfire
  2. Cottonwood Fire Update Saturday, June 27, 2026
  3. Cottonwood Fire: Utah blaze near Beaver jumps to size of Philadelphia after extreme Utah weather fuels flames
  4. As western fires erupt, Trump's Forest Service says it's now fully staffed
  5. State of Emergency declared in Kentucky due to widespread flooding
  6. Forest Service shake-up will boost states' role