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Burn restrictions on minds as dryness evident in area

Unusually dry ground conditions have prompted at least one rural Thunder Bay municipality to ban outdoor burning during daylight hours, with others possibly following suit.
forest fire training mock fire two
"The official fire season does not start until April 1, however, due to current weather conditions and resulting fire hazard, we are looking at (an) early start of the 2024 fire season," fire Chief Sean Horan said in the bulletin.

THUNDER BAY -- Unusually dry ground conditions have prompted at least one rural Thunder Bay municipality to ban outdoor burning during daylight hours, with others possibly following suit.

An Oliver Paipoonge bulletin last week said that day burning was banned within that municipality as of Tuesday until further notice.

"The official fire season does not start until April 1, however, due to current weather conditions and resulting fire hazard, we are looking at (an) early start of the 2024 fire season," fire Chief Sean Horan said in the bulletin.

Under the order, burning is banned two hours before sunset and two hours after sunrise, the bulletin said.

Conmee fire Chief Robb Day said his municipality is also looking at similar burn restrictions "very soon."

"It's looking like we are about to have a dry start to a potentially very dry and high-risk fire season," Day said. "This risk . . . can be reduced exponentially by restrictions on daytime burning."

Neebing acting fire Chief Roger Van Ballegooie said that while Oliver Paipoonge's partial burn ban is "understandable," Neebing isn't going to follow suit just yet.

"We will continue to watch spring melt and any further precipitation as we approach the April 1 burn permit season," Van Ballegooie said.

Last summer's wildfire season in the province, which particularly impacted Northwestern Ontario, was one of the worst on record.

A regional spokesman for Ontario's Aviation, Forest Fire and Emergency Services agency said there is no current plans to impose any provincial restricted fire zones.

"As we are still a few weeks away from the point where provincial legislation will begin to regulate open burning, municipal fire teams who may be concerned about local fire danger conditions can enact their own measures to regulate the public's use of fire in this period," said Dryden-based agency spokesman Chris Marchand.

 


The Chronicle-Journal/Local Journalism Initiative




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