Monday, June 8, 2026
ADVT 
National

Leaf blowers, gas tools axed in Oak Bay, B.C.

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 26 May, 2022 04:26 PM
  • Leaf blowers, gas tools axed in Oak Bay, B.C.

OAK BAY, B.C. - Gas-powered leaf blowers and other landscaping tools fuelled by gas will soon be banned in the Vancouver Island District of Oak Bay.

Councillors have voted unanimously in favour of a ban on the noisy, fume-producing tools, including chainsaws and lawn mowers.

Users, from homeowners to professional landscaping companies, will have three years to phase out gas-powered items.

Staff must submit a report to council within the next month providing recommendations for a new bylaw and proposals for education and enforcement.

Gas-powered leaf blowers have been banned in parts of Vancouver's West End for more than 20 years and council passed a motion in January to phase out all gas-powered landscaping tools by 2024.

The District of Saanich also flirted with a ban on leaf blowers last year but the motion failed and the issued was referred to committee for further work.

MORE National ARTICLES

Climate change cited as reason to deny injunction

Climate change cited as reason to deny injunction
Lawyer Steven Kelliher, representing Victoria landscaper Robert (Saul) Arbess, says the court must weigh the importance to the environment of protecting old-growth trees in the Fairy Creek area of Vancouver Island as opposed to the company's economic interests.

Climate change cited as reason to deny injunction

Missing man found dead in Manning Park: police

Missing man found dead in Manning Park: police
Fendrikov, described by police as an avid hiker with significant backcountry experience, was reported missing earlier this week when he did not show up for work.

Missing man found dead in Manning Park: police

Indigenous tourism faces tough pandemic recovery

Indigenous tourism faces tough pandemic recovery
A report from the association and the Conference Board of Canada shows modest recovery over the last year, but it still projects an overall 54 per cent decline since the pandemic hit last March.

Indigenous tourism faces tough pandemic recovery

VPD searches for witness to frightening Yaletown collision

VPD searches for witness to frightening Yaletown collision
Investigators believe the collision was caused by an impaired driver who went the wrong way down Richards Street, before striking a tree and crashing through a construction fence near Richards and Pacific around 11 a.m.

VPD searches for witness to frightening Yaletown collision

Killed a family: Mass murderer seeking parole

Killed a family: Mass murderer seeking parole
David Shearing, who now goes by the name David Ennis, shot and killed George and Edith Bentley; their daughter, Jackie; and her husband, Bob Johnson, while the family was on a camping trip in the Clearwater Valley near Wells Gray Provincial Park, about 120 kilometres north of Kamloops, B.C., in 1982.    

Killed a family: Mass murderer seeking parole

Leaders talk affordability in push for votes

Leaders talk affordability in push for votes
The country's headline inflation figure registered an annual increase of 4.1 per cent in August, fuelled by rising demand as more parts of the economy reopened amid supply-chain constraints for many goods.

Leaders talk affordability in push for votes