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Fire Incidents in Kansas (KS)

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This section offers an overview of all fire incidents in Kansas (KS). We analyzed the annual National Fire Incident Reporting System (NFIRS) Public Data Release files provided by the U.S. Fire Administration's (USFA) National Fire Data Center (NFDC) to get this data. Please note, this isn't a fire census. The input from the fire departments may contain human error but the proportion of fire incidents reported to NFIRS is large enough to make reasonable interferences.

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Noncontained Fire Incidents in Kansas (KS)

Noncontained fires demand detailed fire investigations so we've only accounted for those in this report. We haven't considered contained fires with no casualties or significant property loss for this section.

Kansas (KS) Fire Incidents (Top 10 Cities)

This table ranks Kansas (KS) cities based on the number of fire incidents. Topeka ranks first with 895 incidents, while Randolph ranked last, with 11 incidents.

PositionCity4Y Trend2023202220212020
1Topeka895683672667
2Kansas City692581475461
3Wichita62349267403
4Lawrence170224174118
5Overland Park158192159137
6Olathe138170124115
7Pittsburg1201933888
8El Dorado92988254
9Manhattan88123139105
10Lenexa85624031

Kansas (KS) Wildland Fire Incidents (Top 10 Cities)

This table ranks Kansas (KS) cities based on the number of wildland fires. Arkansas City ranks first with 57 incidents, while Towanda Township ranked last, with Loading incidents.

PositionCity4Y Trend2023202220212020
1Arkansas City57523136
2Fort Scott52652119
3Junction City50323713
4Topeka37886548
5Newton3552357
6Galena34424049
7Emporia31234
8Lawrence3150487
9Tonganoxie312587
10Wichita254411

Kansas (KS) Arson Fire Incidents (Top 10 Cities)

This table ranks Kansas (KS) cities based on the number of intentional fires. Lawrence ranks first with 3 incidents, while Wichita ranked last, with Loading incidents.

PositionCity4Y Trend2023202220212020
1Lawrence3573
2El Dorado1000
3Eudora1000
4Great Bend1000
5Herington1000
6Olathe1000
7Ottawa1011
8Abilene0000
9Andover0000
10Arkansas City0000

Kansas (KS) Juvenile Arson Fire Incidents (Top 10 Cities)

This table ranks Kansas (KS) cities based on the number of juvenile intentional fires. Coffeyville ranks first with 1 incidents, while Wichita ranked last, with Loading incidents.

PositionCity4Y Trend2023202220212020
1Coffeyville1000
2Eudora1000
3Gardner1100
4Olathe1000
5Ottawa1010
6Shawnee1000
7Abilene0000
8Andover0000
9Arkansas City0000
10Augusta0000

Kansas (KS) Fire Incidents with Civilian Casualties (Top 10 Cities)

This table ranks Kansas (KS) cities based on the number of fires with civilian casualties. Wichita ranks first with 14 incidents, while Wellsville ranked last, with Loading incidents.

PositionCity4Y Trend2023202220212020
1Wichita144825
2Kansas City5333
3Shawnee5340
4Topeka5845
5Great Bend4131
6Leavenworth4404
7Overland Park4633
8Andover3413
9Lawrence3114
10Liberal3415

Kansas (KS) Fire Incidents with Fire Service Casualties (Top 10 Cities)

This table ranks Kansas (KS) cities based on the number of fires with firefighter casualties. Wichita ranks first with 16 incidents, while Wellsville ranked last, with Loading incidents.

PositionCity4Y Trend2023202220212020
1Wichita160712
2Lawrence4020
3El Dorado3101
4Overland Park3411
5Topeka3836
6Kansas City23121
7Abilene1000
8Arkansas City1010
9Emporia1010
10Eudora1010

Where is Fire Incident Data Coming From? NFIRS

The NFIRS is a reporting standard that fire departments use to uniformly report on the full range of their activities, from fire to emergency medical services (EMS) to equipment involved in the response.

Anyone analyzing the NFIRS data should note that NFIRS is neither a random sample nor a census of fire incidents or casualties in the United States. As such, the analyst may not accurately make estimates of total fires, fire losses, or fire casualties in the United States from NFIRS data alone. Similarly, statistical means (averages) or standard error measurements taken from NFIRS describe the population of fire incidents related to fire departments that participate in NFIRS but do not describe the population of fire incidents in the Nation as a whole. However, the proportion of fire incidents reported to NFIRS is large enough that reasonable inferences can be made that the proportions of fires in NFIRS are similar to the true national measurements.