Tuesday, February 10, 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

Systemic issues behind deadly B.C. sinking: report

Systemic issues behind deadly B.C. sinking: report
The crew partially put on their immersion suits, but the life raft they were trying to deploy went into the ocean without being inflated, and the captain and a crew member went into the ocean after it.  

Systemic issues behind deadly B.C. sinking: report

Health ministers expect details of funding boost

Health ministers expect details of funding boost
British Columbia Health Minister Adrian Dix is hosting the country's health ministers for a second day of talks in Vancouver that are set to include discussions with federal minister Jean-Yves Duclos.  

Health ministers expect details of funding boost

Vancouver's new mayor and council sworn in

Vancouver's new mayor and council sworn in
Sim and the new council were sworn in at an inauguration ceremony at the Orpheum theatre where he also called for help from the federal and provincial governments to address the opioid crisis.  

Vancouver's new mayor and council sworn in

Police investigating arson at Abbotsford home

Police investigating arson at Abbotsford home
On Saturday, at 1am, officials were called to a home at 3030 Trethewey Street and residents inside the home were evacuated safely.  Via release, police say "As a result of the preliminary investigation, this fire is being treated as suspicious,".  

Police investigating arson at Abbotsford home

Shortage of some antibiotics used to treat kids

Shortage of some antibiotics used to treat kids
Health Canada says that four pharmaceutical companies are experiencing shortages of drugs that contain amoxicillin, an antibiotic medication that’s commonly used to treat children with bronchitis, pneumonia and ear infections.

Shortage of some antibiotics used to treat kids

More health investment needs results: Trudeau

More health investment needs results: Trudeau
The meetings in Vancouver are the first time all of Canada's health ministers have gathered in person since 2018. The premiers met in July, when they asked the federal government to increase health transfers to 35 per cent, up from what they said was 22 per cent funding.  

More health investment needs results: Trudeau