Close X
Saturday, November 16, 2024
ADVT 
National

Vancouver fire service cites butane torch lighters as fire incidents hit record high

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 09 Aug, 2023 03:06 PM
  • Vancouver fire service cites butane torch lighters as fire incidents hit record high

The Vancouver Fire Rescue Service says the first half of 2023 has been a record-breaking period for fire-related incidents in the city, with alarming numbers of calls involving drug users and butane torches with flame-locking mechanisms. 

Fire information officer Matthew Trudeau says the service responded to 2,113 calls in the first half of the year, the most in the service's history for the same period and a 31 per cent increase compared to the first half of 2022.

The fire service says in a statement that the leading cause of fires remains discarded smoking materials including matches, lighters, candles, cigarettes, and drug paraphernalia, causing nearly 60 per cent of all incidents. 

The fire service says it's also worried about more fires occurring in single-room occupancy buildings, as well as a notable spike in outdoor fires. 

Trudeau says there have been numerous single-room occupancy fires caused by drug users dropping locked butane lighters and setting fire to themselves or their surroundings.

The service says four people have died in fires so far in 2023, three of them involving blazes caused by smokers' materials. 

The fire service also says more than a quarter of all fires have been the result of arson, which it says is part of an upward trend in suspicious fire incidents. 

MORE National ARTICLES

Surrey RCMP on the lookout for 2 men facing firearms offences charges

Surrey RCMP on the lookout for 2 men facing firearms offences charges
Surrey R-C-M-P say they want the public's help locating 25-year-old Terry MacDonald and 26-year-old Joseph Gregory, who are both wanted for allegedly breaching their bail conditions. Investigators say McDonald is five-foot-six, weighing 150 pounds, while Gregory is six-foot-two and 220 pounds, and both men are considered armed and dangerous.

Surrey RCMP on the lookout for 2 men facing firearms offences charges

Vancouver council announces Komagata Maru street name to address historic wrongs

Vancouver council announces Komagata Maru street name to address historic wrongs
Canada Place will get the second name to acknowledge historical discrimination against South Asian communities. The Komagata Maru docked near the current location of Canada Place in 1914 with 340 Sikh, 27 Muslim and 12 Hindu passengers on board, most of whom were denied entry into Canada despite having valid travel documents. 

Vancouver council announces Komagata Maru street name to address historic wrongs

Runaway Bus gets away and ends up on lawn of a house

Runaway Bus gets away and ends up on lawn of a house
Police in West Vancouver say a bus got away from a driver trying to fix a door problem in Horseshoe Bay today. Police say as the bus began to roll the driver fell out. The bus ended up on the front lawn of a house.

Runaway Bus gets away and ends up on lawn of a house

168 Street and Fraser Highway closed due to fatal crash: Surrey RCMP

168 Street and Fraser Highway closed due to fatal crash: Surrey RCMP
The intersection of 168 Street and Fraser Highway is closed in all directions and traffic is being rerouted. Fraser Highway is closed westbound at 176Street and 168 Street is closed northbound just south of Fraser Highway. 

168 Street and Fraser Highway closed due to fatal crash: Surrey RCMP

Auditor General largely praises B.C. COVID-19 tourism supports, cites 'minor' shortfalls

Auditor General largely praises B.C. COVID-19 tourism supports, cites 'minor' shortfalls
Michael Pickup says there were "minor inconsistencies" with the otherwise well designed and implemented destination development grant program that handed out more than $41 million in 2021 and 2022. Pickup says 12 of the 106 projects that received money were missing notes from reviewers detailing the rationale for their decision and while due diligence was done, it wasn't well defined.

Auditor General largely praises B.C. COVID-19 tourism supports, cites 'minor' shortfalls

B.C. government to provide additional $25 million for marine restoration projects

B.C. government to provide additional $25 million for marine restoration projects
Environment Minister George Heyman told a news conference Tuesday that debris from more than 4,600 kilometres of shoreline has been removed so far, while creating more than 1,700 jobs. He says the new funding will allow the initiatives to continue to protect the coast and the communities that live there.

B.C. government to provide additional $25 million for marine restoration projects