Wednesday, February 11, 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

Police name murder victims found in Burnaby, B.C.

Police name murder victims found in Burnaby, B.C.
A statement from the Integrated Homicide Investigation Team says the bodies of 24-year-old Kiesha Garie and 30-year-old Umair Kasim were inside the vehicle, parked in a neighbourhood in northwest Burnaby. 

Police name murder victims found in Burnaby, B.C.

Trudeau says he will guarantee emissions targets

Trudeau says he will guarantee emissions targets
The next target is set for 2030, and requires Canada to get emissions to 55 to 60 per cent of what they were in 2005. That's a more-ambitious version of a previous target the Trudeau government set when it came into power. 

Trudeau says he will guarantee emissions targets

Burnaby RCMP officer killed on the job, please avoid Canada Way

Burnaby RCMP officer killed on the job, please avoid Canada Way
Several media reports say the officer was killed while assisting a bylaw officer at a homeless camp site. Federal Public Safety Minister Marco Mendicino said he was devastated by the news of the loss of the officer in the line of duty.

Burnaby RCMP officer killed on the job, please avoid Canada Way

PHAC eyeing COVID-19 variant evolution as fall resurgence looms

PHAC eyeing COVID-19 variant evolution as fall resurgence looms
At the House of Commons health committee, Chief Public Health Officer Dr. Theresa Tam said the Public Health Agency of Canada is keeping a particularly careful eye on the evolution of Omicron variants, which are the most common subvariants in the country, along with any new mutations.

PHAC eyeing COVID-19 variant evolution as fall resurgence looms

Quebec dad, Kamaljit Arora, charged with murder in kids' deaths

Quebec dad, Kamaljit Arora, charged with murder in kids' deaths
Kamaljit Arora was charged despite being unable to appear for his arraignment — either in person or by video from hospital — before a judge at the courthouse in Laval, Que. Arora is charged in the killings of his daughter, 13, and son, 11, both identified in court documents by the initials "A.A." He was also charged with assault by strangulation of his wife.   

Quebec dad, Kamaljit Arora, charged with murder in kids' deaths

Health complaints top B.C. advocate's list

Health complaints top B.C. advocate's list
Jay Chalke's annual report for 2021-2022 says the office received almost 1,300 complaints or inquiries focused on programs and services provided by the Ministry of Health. The figure is more than 15 per cent of all 8,215 complaints lodged with the office in that period.  

Health complaints top B.C. advocate's list