Sunday, June 28, 2026
ADVT 
National

Open-Burning Bans Lifted, Eased In Two More Fire Centres In Southern B.C.

The Canadian Press, 15 Sep, 2015 12:45 PM
    VANCOUVER — The ban on open fires, burn barrels, fireworks and tiki torches has been lifted in two more British Columbia regions due to the decreased risk of forest fires.
     
    The BC Wildfire Service says its ban in the Coastal Fire Centre ended at noon Monday.
     
    It says the ban will partially end in the Kamloops Centre at noon Tuesday, allowing open burning in the Clearwater zone and in the Salmon Arm zone in areas above 1,200 metres.
     
    The ban will remain in all other areas of the Salmon Arm zone until Oct. 1, and in Kamloops, Vernon, Penticton, Merritt and Lilloeet until Oct. 15.
     
    The wildfire service says its decisions only apply to provincial parks, Crown and private lands but not municipalities, which have their own bylaws.
     
    It says people who plan to do any open burning should check with their local governments to ensure there are no restrictions.
     

    MORE National ARTICLES

    NDP MPs Face Questions About Alleged Partisan Use Of Riding Offices

    OTTAWA — A third front has opened up in the war between the NDP and rival parties over the allegedly improper use of parliamentary resources — this time involving questions about partisan activity in taxpayer-funded constituency offices.

    NDP MPs Face Questions About Alleged Partisan Use Of Riding Offices

    Former Vancouver Olympics Ceo Wants Sexual Abuse Lawsuit Dropped, Costs Awarded

    VANCOUVER — A lawyer for former Olympics CEO John Furlong has asked a B.C. Supreme Court judge to dismiss a sexual abuse lawsuit against his client and award special costs.

    Former Vancouver Olympics Ceo Wants Sexual Abuse Lawsuit Dropped, Costs Awarded

    Air Canada Plane Short Of Runway, Hit Antenna Array Before Crash: Safety Board

    Air Canada Plane Short Of Runway, Hit Antenna Array Before Crash: Safety Board
    HALIFAX — An Air Canada plane that crashed at the Halifax airport was about 335 metres short of the runway before it hit an antenna array, which ripped off its main landing gear, the Transportation Safety Board said Sunday.

    Air Canada Plane Short Of Runway, Hit Antenna Array Before Crash: Safety Board

    Municipality's Software Violates Employees' Privacy Rights: B.C. Commissioner

    Municipality's Software Violates Employees' Privacy Rights: B.C. Commissioner
    VICTORIA — British Columbia's privacy commissioner says a municipality violated privacy rights by secretly installing computer spyware the mayor says was used to bug his computer.

    Municipality's Software Violates Employees' Privacy Rights: B.C. Commissioner

    Future Shop Closure Illustrates Challenges Facing Canadian Retailers

    Future Shop Closure Illustrates Challenges Facing Canadian Retailers
    TORONTO — The sudden closure of Future Shop electronics stores demonstrates the evolution taking place in the Canadian retail space amid increased competition from online shopping, analysts say.

    Future Shop Closure Illustrates Challenges Facing Canadian Retailers

    Federal Anti-terrorism Bill Changes Not Enough To Satisfy Concerns

    Federal Anti-terrorism Bill Changes Not Enough To Satisfy Concerns
    OTTAWA — A Conservative plan to amend the federal anti-terrorism bill hasn't squelched opposition to the sweeping security legislation.

    Federal Anti-terrorism Bill Changes Not Enough To Satisfy Concerns