Close X
Thursday, October 31, 2024
ADVT 
National

Vancouver Requires Carbon Monoxide Alarms, Sets Fines For Unsafe Behaviours

Darpan News Desk IANS, 18 May, 2017 10:43 AM
    VANCOUVER — The City of Vancouver has tightened its fire bylaw in an effort to keep residents safe from threats ranging from carbon monoxide to grass fires.
     
    Vancouver Fire and Rescue Services Capt. Jonathan Gormick says Vancouver is now the third jurisdiction in Canada to make carbon monoxide alarms mandatory in all residential buildings, including single-family homes.
     
    The alarms can be hard-wired, electrical or battery operated, and Gormick says the only exceptions are homes without an attached garage or homes that don't have fuel-fired appliances, such as a gas stove or water heater.
     
    New fines have also been imposed in hopes of curbing behaviours that Gormick says have recently led to fires, fire damage, and unnecessary use of city resources.
     
    Penalties include a $750 per-day fine for owners who do not properly secure unoccupied buildings, and $500 fines for any malicious and false report of a fire or activation of a fire alarm.
     
    Gormick says brush fires have also been a problem and smokers could be fined up to $500 for throwing away burning cigarette butts or other material.
     
    "Previously, I believe that the only recourse we had against people who discarded smoking material improperly was a littering fine and, maybe not last year, but in 2015 we had an astronomical increase in the number of vegetation and brush fires because we had a very dry summer here," he says.
     
    Smoking materials create a major hazard when improperly discarded and the new fine specifically targets smokers who refuse to use the proper receptacles, Gormick says.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Ten Things To Know About The British Columbia Election

    Ten Things To Know About The British Columbia Election
    VANCOUVER — Voters in British Columbia go to the polls on Tuesday. Here are 10 things to know about B.C. politics:

    Ten Things To Know About The British Columbia Election

    Tight B.C. Election Puts Vote Splitting On Agenda In Campaign's Final Days

    NANAIMO, B.C. — British Columbia's political party leaders have been frantically crisscrossing the province, making their final appeals to voters who might still be swayed before casting their ballots Tuesday.

    Tight B.C. Election Puts Vote Splitting On Agenda In Campaign's Final Days

    28-Yr-Old Rohtak Woman Gets 7-year Jail For False Gangrape Complaint

    28-Yr-Old Rohtak Woman Gets 7-year Jail For False Gangrape Complaint
    The woman, Meenakshi, 28, had in June 2010 filed a complaint alleging she was gangraped by a Rohtak resident and his two brother-in-laws after they gave her lift in their car.

    28-Yr-Old Rohtak Woman Gets 7-year Jail For False Gangrape Complaint

    Search On For B.C. Fire Chief Who May Have Been Swept Away In Swollen Creek

    Search On For B.C. Fire Chief Who May Have Been Swept Away In Swollen Creek
    CACHE CREEK, B.C. — The RCMP says the fire chief of Cache Creek in British Columbia's Interior is missing and may have been swept away in a swollen creek.

    Search On For B.C. Fire Chief Who May Have Been Swept Away In Swollen Creek

    17-Year-Old Youth Injured In Multi-Vehicle Collision In Surrey Dies

    17-Year-Old Youth Injured In Multi-Vehicle Collision In Surrey Dies
    Police say he was one of three people hurt in two separate collisions on 64th Avenue on Wednesday night.

    17-Year-Old Youth Injured In Multi-Vehicle Collision In Surrey Dies

    Surrey Drug Bust Results In 13 Arrests, Seizure Of Handguns And Crossbows

    Surrey Drug Bust Results In 13 Arrests, Seizure Of Handguns And Crossbows
    Surrey RCMP advises that multiple search warrants were executed in mid-April at properties alleged to be involved in the street level drug trade. 

    Surrey Drug Bust Results In 13 Arrests, Seizure Of Handguns And Crossbows