Close X
Wednesday, September 25, 2024
ADVT 
National

B.C. man ordered to pay $450,000 over 2019 wildfire triggered by debris burn

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 14 Nov, 2023 04:35 PM
  • B.C. man ordered to pay $450,000 over 2019 wildfire triggered by debris burn

The B.C. Forest Appeals Commission says a man who lit a large debris pile on fire that eventually caused a wildfire should pay the provincial government nearly $450,000 for firefighting costs and lost timber resources.

In an appeal decision released last week, the commission says Clarke Matthiesen tried to blame an arsonist for the blaze that investigators say started on his property west of Quesnel, B.C., in the province's interior. 

The decision says Matthiesen lit the debris fire on a property he owns with his brother in February 2019, thinking snow around the blaze would work as a "fuel break." 

But it says that more than two months later, Matthiesen and his brother came upon a grass fire nearby, which they couldn't put out with shovels. 

It says Matthiesen then drove to a neighbouring property to report the fire, and the BC Wildfire Service responded that evening.

The commission rejected Matthiesen's claims that his neighbour's grandson could have lit the fire, and found instead that it was a "holdover" from the debris pile that measured 14 metres by 16 metres.

He was ordered to pay a $2,350 fine, $260,369 for fire control costs and $179,344 for destruction of Crown-owned timber resources. 

MORE National ARTICLES

RCMP say no critical injuries in crash of B.C. bus carrying pipeline camp workers

RCMP say no critical injuries in crash of B.C. bus carrying pipeline camp workers
Prince George RCMP say no critical injuries have been reported among the 30 people on the bus that went off a forest service road and crashed 120 kilometres north of Prince George, B.C.

RCMP say no critical injuries in crash of B.C. bus carrying pipeline camp workers

Pregnant woman at Surrey Memorial Hospital told to go home and wait, delivered baby in car

Pregnant woman at Surrey Memorial Hospital told to go home and wait, delivered baby in car
According to media reports, on Sunday, a pregnant woman gave birth to her baby in her car after being turned away from the hospital on the pretext that what she was experiencing wasn't labour pain. Doctors at the SMH gave her morphine and told her to go home and wait.

Pregnant woman at Surrey Memorial Hospital told to go home and wait, delivered baby in car

Impaired Abbotsford driver makes their child blow into the ignition interlock system

Impaired Abbotsford driver makes their child blow into the ignition interlock system
Police in Abbotsford say a driver admitted to making their child blow into the ignition interlock system meant to keep impaired drivers from getting behind the wheel. They’ve also informed the Ministry of Children and Family Development. 

Impaired Abbotsford driver makes their child blow into the ignition interlock system

Environment Canada says 10 tornadoes confirmed in Alberta during Wednesday storm

Environment Canada says 10 tornadoes confirmed in Alberta during Wednesday storm
Environment Canada confirms what it calls a "tornado outbreak" in rural Alberta earlier this week. It says between 2:30 p.m. and 7:30 p.m. on Wednesday, nine twisters hopscotched between Calgary and Medicine Hat and another was spotted near Vermillion in eastern Alberta. 

Environment Canada says 10 tornadoes confirmed in Alberta during Wednesday storm

Surrey to stay with RCMP over municipal force

Surrey to stay with RCMP over municipal force
The B.C. government recommended in April that Surrey continue its transition to the independent Surrey Police Service, offering $150 million over five years to help the city cover costs, but saying it would not pay the estimated $72 million in severance for officers if council decided to revert back to the RCMP.

Surrey to stay with RCMP over municipal force

B.C.'s largest wildfire still threatens, as conditions elsewhere ease

B.C.'s largest wildfire still threatens, as conditions elsewhere ease
Rain and cooler weather over much of British Columbia has prompted two fire centres in the southern and central Interior to roll back campfire bans. The Kamloops and Cariboo fire centres say the Category 1 open fire ban will lift at noon Friday, covering blazes no larger than 1.5-metres high by 1.5-metres wide. 

B.C.'s largest wildfire still threatens, as conditions elsewhere ease