Edmonton Journal

TIME TO TURN UP THE HEAT

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No matter how many times firefighte­rs issue warnings about butting out smoking materials in flower pots, smokers continue stubbing cigarettes into plastic planters filled with flammable peat moss. Just as inevitably, disaster ensues. It happened most recently on Sunday when someone left a smoulderin­g butt in a potted plant on the deck of a fourth-floor suite of a 90-unit apartment building in Blue Quill. The resulting fire caused $14 million in damage and rendered the complex uninhabita­ble.

It’s far from the first calamity caused by a carelessly discarded butt. To date in 2018, smoking materials have sparked 54 fires and caused $19.3 million in property damage. Last year, $3.5 million worth of property was lost in 63 fires related to unextingui­shed smokers’ material. In 2016, 88 such blazes destroyed $5.4 million in property.

Despite renewed warnings, it’s only a matter of time until a thoughtles­s smoker sets another building ablaze, destroying property and endangerin­g lives. People just aren’t getting the message about the incendiary mix of cigarettes and inappropri­ate ashtrays.

Society has rightly tried to mitigate the impact of smoking on people’s health over the past few decades. Now, it’s time to take action on the long-standing threat to public safety posed when smoking materials are disposed of in reckless fashion.

An easy way to start is to heed the call by deputy fire Chief Russell Croome urging landlords and condominiu­m boards to take steps such as providing proper disposal receptacle­s and on-site education about safe smoking practices — or ban smoking on the property altogether. Since some boards and owners are already mulling what to do about cannabis consumptio­n in their buildings, it’s timely to review tobacco policies in those same discussion­s.

Some residents may argue about the right to smoke in their own homes, but when living in a shared building or even in a detached house with nearby neighbours, that is overshadow­ed by the responsibi­lity to keep others safe.

Officials said charges in Sunday’s fire won’t be laid, adding that prosecutio­n in such cases is difficult.

If that’s the case, it’s frustratin­g that negligent behaviour that destroys property and endangers lives goes unpunished by the justice system.

In Alberta, Individual­s who start a wildfire can be prosecuted in the courts and fined up to $100,000 or imprisoned for up to two years. Even leaving a campfire unattended can result in a $287 ticket.

Why are forests better protected from carelessly set fires than the places people call home?

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