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October 27, 2017 4:43 pm

Open Fire Ban in P.G. Fire Centre

Monday, July 10, 2017 @ 8:40 AM

Prince George, B.C. – Effective immediately, all open fires are banned in the Prince George Fire Centre.

This includes all campfires.

(map at right details impacted area)

This prohibition is being implemented due to current weather conditions and the volume of fires that the BC Wildfire Service is responding to in the northeast part of the province. More lightning is in the forecast within the fire centre, and firefighting resources must focus on existing fires and new, naturally occurring fires.

This prohibition will remain in effect until Oct. 21, 2017, or until the public is otherwise notified.

This prohibition covers all BC Parks, Crown lands and private lands within the Prince George Fire Centre’s jurisdiction. It does not apply within the boundaries of a local government that has wildfire prevention bylaws in place and is serviced by a fire department.

The following activities are prohibited:

* campfires

* Category 2 open fires

* Category 3 open fires

* the burning of any waste, slash or other materials

* stubble or grass fires of any size over any area

* the use of stoves and other portable campfire apparatuses that are not CSA-approved or ULC-approved

* fires burning woody debris in outdoor stoves

* the use of tiki torches, fireworks, firecrackers, sky lanterns, burning barrels or burning cages of any size or description

* the use of binary exploding targets (e.g., for rifle target practice)

This prohibition does not apply to CSA-rated or ULC-rated cooking stoves that use gas, propane or briquettes, or to a portable campfire apparatus that uses briquettes, liquid or gaseous fuel, as long as the height of the flame is less than 15 centimetres.

Anyone found in contravention of an open burning prohibition may be issued a violation ticket for $1,150, required to pay an administrative penalty of $10,000 or, if convicted in court, fined up to $100,000 and/or sentenced to one year in jail. If the contravention causes or contributes to a wildfire, the person responsible may be ordered to pay all firefighting and associated costs.

Comments

Good, no dicking around by authorities when it comes to people ignoring this ban! The logging and basically our livelihood is important to BC, so this needs to be adhered to !

Anyone tossing a cigarette should be charged the maximum fine!

now they just need someone to enforce it.

Can only hope the drunk who starts a campfire falls in to it.

Open fires have been banned for some time already. The campfire ban is what’s new.

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