Monday, July 6, 2026
ADVT 
National

B.C. tenants ordered to pay $500,000 after fire

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 16 Jan, 2023 02:01 PM
  • B.C. tenants ordered to pay $500,000 after fire

VANCOUVER - Two Vancouver tenants have been ordered to pay more than $500,000 following a November 2017 apartment fire that a judge ruled was "foreseeable."

B.C. Supreme Court Justice Matthew Kirchner ruled Angela Chou created a risk of harm and fire by keeping her apartment "in a near-hoarding state" with densely packed items covering most of the floor space.

Chou and her former partner Danny Chen, who was not living there but was still listed as a tenant, have been ordered to pay the Langara Gardens apartment building more than $512,000 for damages caused by the fire.

The fire spread to other apartments, and the court ruled Chou will also pay $56,000 to Langara Gardens for the rent lost while 10 units were repaired.

A fire investigator testified that the blaze started when household goods in the unit, likely a box or a pillowcase, made contact with a halogen bulb when Chou was momentarily out of the room.

Kirchner's ruling, released online Friday, says Chou created the "unreasonable risk of harm," and risk of fire in particular, because of the stacked, combustible material kept in her apartment.

MORE National ARTICLES

B.C. to launch fall COVID-19 booster campaign

B.C. to launch fall COVID-19 booster campaign
Provincial health officer Dr. Bonnie Henry says the immunization campaign will also include more opportunities to get the flu vaccine as respiratory illnesses are expected to return after a decline due to COVID restrictions. The National Advisory Committee on Immunization recommends people receive their second booster dose at least six months or longer after their first booster.

B.C. to launch fall COVID-19 booster campaign

Burnaby morning crash claims life of 75 year old female passenger

Burnaby morning crash claims life of 75 year old female passenger
On Tuesday, September 6, at 6:30 a.m., Coquitlam RCMP frontline officers were first to respond to a report of a single vehicle collision in the 200-block of North Road, near the Coquitlam-Burnaby border. The vehicle involved left the roadway and flipped. It does not appear any other vehicles were involved.

Burnaby morning crash claims life of 75 year old female passenger

Liberal cabinet meeting in Vancouver

Liberal cabinet meeting in Vancouver
Trudeau has indicated affordability will be a key agenda item as Canadians struggle to pay their bills and inflation keeps going after bank accounts with a wrecking ball.

Liberal cabinet meeting in Vancouver

Calls to make overdose education mandatory in B.C

Calls to make overdose education mandatory in B.C
The Simon Fraser University student is among a number of advocates who deliver overdose education in B.C. schools but want such information made a mandatory part of the curriculum. The Education Ministry said it's up to each school district to determine the delivery of any programs, including whether to stock naloxone kits or train teachers how to use them. 

Calls to make overdose education mandatory in B.C

Officials plan for spread of southwest B.C. blaze

Officials plan for spread of southwest B.C. blaze
The lightning-caused fire is burning south of Highway 3 in E.C. Manning Park, roughly five kilometres southwest of the Manning Park Resort.

Officials plan for spread of southwest B.C. blaze

B.C. group has close encounter with orcas

B.C. group has close encounter with orcas
Van Sittert, who had been seated on a rock above, said she was initially worried for MacNab's safety because of the whales' high-speed approach, but describes the encounter as "easily one of the most exciting moments" of her life.

B.C. group has close encounter with orcas