Coral Springs Brush Fire: What We Know So Far
No verified report has yet matched the brush fire dispatched on 46th Dr. in Coral Springs, but the latest available information points to a separate Broward County wildland fire that officials said was human-caused and still under investigation.
According to the wildfire incident summary cited by WildFire Explorer and NIFC, the Broward County fire burned about 9,200 acres west of U.S. Highway 27 near Mile Marker 45 — roughly 13 miles west of Coral Springs — and was 50% contained as of April 23. Officials reported no injuries or fatalities and said no structures were damaged or destroyed.
The same incident summary said there were no mandatory evacuations, no evacuation warnings and no major road closures tied to that fire, according to the report. A National Weather Service advisory for the Coral Springs and Broward County area, meanwhile, warned of flood conditions and heavy rainfall rather than fire danger.
No confirmed road closures have been found for the Coral Springs address tied to the initial dispatch. The only traffic-related reporting in the search results involved a different Florida City brush fire that caused smoke and delays on U.S. 1 and Card Sound Road.
Dispatch records show 13 similar brush fire incidents in Broward County over the past six months, underscoring how often local fire crews are being called to vegetation fires in the region.
What happens next will depend on whether Coral Springs or Broward County officials release a verified incident report for the 46th Dr. fire. For the nearby Broward County wildfire, investigators were still working to determine the exact cause even after NIFC classified it as human-caused.
Day.News will continue to update this story as officials release more information.
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