The Province

Smoking drivers likely behind roadside blazes

Ashes tossed out window can also cause fire, officials say

- Stephanie Ip sip@postmedia.com twitter.com/stephanie_ip

Three roadside fires in a single day have the Vancouver fire department warning smokers that a fire risk exists here just as much as in the Interior.

“Grass fires on the side of the roadways are still happening and it just is amazing — in the province of B.C. right now, with all the education out there — that people continuall­y drive down the street with their cigarette hanging out the window,” said Joe Foster, an assistant chief with Vancouver Fire and Rescue Services.

Foster said that the hot ash from a cigarette, let alone a tossed burning butt, is enough to start a fire in dried-out roadside grass.

On Friday, there were at least three small roadside fires in the city.

Foster said there is no point wasting investigat­ive resources on small grass fires sparked by ashes or cigarette butts tossed from passing cars.

“We don’t put the resources into them as a fire investigat­ions team to find that cigarette butt at the side of the road — but it doesn’t take a brain surgeon to figure out that fire doesn’t start spontaneou­sly by itself in the middle of a grass area,” said Foster.

While some people may use the ashtray inside of their vehicles to extinguish the butt, Foster said even the ashes flicked from out window off a cigarette can be enough to spark a fire in dry summer conditions.

“Any embers will do it,” he said, noting it’s a $500 fine for discarding cigarette butts out of a car window.

 ?? LES BAZSO/PNG FILES ?? Hot ash from a cigarette is enough to spark a roadside fire, says Joe Foster, assistant chief with Vancouver Fire and Rescue Services.
LES BAZSO/PNG FILES Hot ash from a cigarette is enough to spark a roadside fire, says Joe Foster, assistant chief with Vancouver Fire and Rescue Services.

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