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Heat wave adds more open-fire bans in B.C.

The Canadian Press CASTLEGAR — As temperatures soar across the province, the Ministry of Forests is taking another step to protect against wildfires.
The Canadian Press

CASTLEGAR — As temperatures soar across the province, the Ministry of Forests is taking another step to protect against wildfires.

All open fires, with the exception of campfires and certain cook stoves, will be banned in the southeast, effective at noon on July 8. Open fires are already banned on Vancouver Island.

Under the new ban, the burning of waste, slash or grassland, or any campfire larger than half-a-metre by half-a-metre, is prohibited from just north of Revelstoke to the U.S. border, and from the west side of the Monashee Mountains to the Alberta boundary. Violators could be handed a $345 ticket or face penalties of up to $100,000 and one year in jail if convicted in court.

Open fire bans are already in effect in the Coastal, Kamloops and Cariboo regions. The Coastal region includes Vancouver Isalnd

A low-to-moderate fire danger rating is in effect across most of B.C., with a few small pockets rated high to extreme. But officials with the wildfire management branch say that could change quickly as the current heat wave parches regions drenched by heavy rains late last month.