Graham County Emergency Management

Graham County Emergency Management Graham County Emergency Management is dedicated to serving the citizens and visitors of Graham County This agency is responsible for planning for disasters.

Disasters can be any emergency that taxes our local resources. Planning consists of identifying potential man made and natural disasters that could affect Graham County in the future, and then working with all the different agencies that might be involved in these potential disasters and identifying their roles and ways of dealing with the problems. Also a part of Emergency Management is Operation

s. During a disaster Emergency Management is a lead agency in coordinating resources in our county and resources that other state and local agencies might be able to supply Graham County. Emergency Management is also responsible for planning for accidents involving hazard materials and mitigating the effects of a release or spill. Search is another responsibility of Emergency Management.

05/12/2026

UPDATE Subject turned himself in

The search for Scott Allen Mello continues. Search crews, K9 teams, Fire Department Personnel and Law Enforcement are in the area of East Murphy near Hill St, Lowes, Murphy Post Office, etc. IF YOU LIVE IN THAT AREA AND YOU HAVE A CAMERA ON YOUR HOUSE. PLEASE CHECK IT FROM 5am to 10am May 11th. If you have footage of Scott call 911 or 828-835-3144 and let Law Enforcement know about it.

Yesterdays post: BOLO missing person. Scott Allen Mello. 55 Year old male, 5'5", appx 250 pounds, white hair white beard. Last seen 5:30 am in Hill St area near Murphy PD. No clothing description. Attached picture is recent but not today.

05/11/2026

UPDATE Subject turned himself in

BOLO missing person. Scott Allen Mello. 55 Year old male, 5'5", appx 250 pounds, white hair white beard. Last seen 5:30 am in Hill St area near Murphy PD. No clothing description. Attached picture is recent but not today.

05/03/2026
04/29/2026
Come join us at Science Night. We will have our underwater sonar drone there doing live demos.
04/27/2026

Come join us at Science Night. We will have our underwater sonar drone there doing live demos.

04/27/2026

The statewide burn ban remains in effect until further notice despite weekend rain in some areas. Persistent dry weather and increasing rainfall deficits from the last several months have left most of the state needing 10 inches of rain or more.

“While the rainfall we received over the weekend was a welcome sight, it offered little to no relief from widespread drought conditions while being nowhere near enough to reduce our wildfire risk,” said Agriculture Commissioner Steve Troxler. “Even the areas that received the heaviest amount of rain will quickly dry out from the sunshine and warmer temperatures. Until we get some additional rain and see more green-up in our forests, holding the burn ban in place statewide is the best option right now.”

While green-up and leaf-out are progressing at normal rate, low soil moisture, dry surface fuels and persistent low humidity are contributing to wildfire activity. For Western North Carolina, excessive forest fuels from Hurricane Helene are more available now than they were in 2025, low water levels in coastal areas have helped produce intense fire behavior where ground fire will likely be a long-term issue, and the Piedmont experienced 87 new wildfire starts over the weekend alone. Extended attack and mop-up efforts will be taxing and long-winded until drought conditions improve.

Read news release: https://bit.ly/497dNht

Both the State and Local burn bans remain in effect. Please refrain from ANY open fires until further notice.
04/22/2026

Both the State and Local burn bans remain in effect. Please refrain from ANY open fires until further notice.

04/14/2026

Since the state-issued ban on open burning was enacted March 28, a total of 554 wildfires has burned more than 2,200 acres across the state. With little rainfall or improvement expected over the next 7-10 days, the statewide burn ban and enforcement action will continue until further notice.

Of the 554 wildfires that have burned since the burn ban took effect, only four have been determined to be the result of lightning strikes. Preliminary data indicates that 152 of those 554 wildfires were determined to be human caused, with the remainder listed as unknown or undetermined, likely pending law enforcement investigation and action. Since the state’s burn ban took effect, 150 citations have been issued for illegal burning.

During a state-issued burn ban, the same N.C. Forest Service personnel providing initial and extended attack for wildfire response are providing the necessary enforcement action to support the ban on open burning. Reducing the number of new ignitions is critical for sustaining adequate resource availability for an extended period, making state-issued bans a necessary tool for keeping wildfires contained and as small as possible until fully extinguished.

The public is urged to abide by the burn ban and to use extreme caution with farm equipment, machines, mowers, vehicles on dry grass, smoking materials such as ci******es, anything that can throw a spark. In current high-risk conditions, these could be a possible fire source. While not classified as open burning and not affected by the state’s ban on open burning, they are still contributors to new fire starts across the state.

Read news release: https://www.ncagr.gov/news/press-releases/2026/04/14/statewide-burn-ban-and-enforcement-continue-dry-conditions-persist

Just a reminder the local and statewide burn ban is still in effect. Please DO NOT burn into further notice.
04/08/2026

Just a reminder the local and statewide burn ban is still in effect. Please DO NOT burn into further notice.

Due to increased wildfire risk, the N.C. Forest Service has issued a ban on all open burning and has canceled all burning permits statewide effective 6 p.m. Saturday, March 28 until further notice.

Under North Carolina law, the ban prohibits all open burning in the affected counties, regardless of whether a permit was previously issued. The issuance of any new permits has also been suspended until the ban is lifted. Anyone violating the burn ban faces a $100 fine plus $183 court costs. Any person responsible for setting a fire may be liable for any expenses related to extinguishing the fire.

The burn ban does not apply to fires started within 100 feet of an occupied dwelling. The local fire marshal has authority to issue a burn ban within those 100 feet.

Read news release: https://www.ncagr.gov/news/press-releases/2026/03/28/statewide-burn-ban-issued-north-carolina-due-hazardous-forest-fire-conditions

Address

Robbinsville, NC
28771

Telephone

+18284797967

Website

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