Truro News

CAUSE CONFIRMED

- BY MICHAEL MACDONALD

Yarmouth County fire ignited by heat coming from a wood stove.

A fast-moving fire that claimed the lives of four children in rural Nova Scotia last month was ignited by heat coming from a wood stove, the province’s fire marshal confirmed Thursday as he said his office must do a better job of releasing such informatio­n.

“We have an opportunit­y to look at what’s been done in the past and an obligation to make improvemen­ts in the public interest where we can,” Fred Jeffers said in an interview.

While the fire was sparked by a wood stove, its origin was around the chimney, he said.

The two- storey home in Pubnico Head was engulfed in flames by the time firefighte­rs arrived 11 minutes after receiving a call for help on Jan. 7.

Emma Kennedy and her common- law partner Phil Prouty escaped the blaze, but the fire killed four-month-old Winston Prouty, four-year-old Jayla Kennedy, seven-year-old Mya Prouty and seven-year-old Mason Grant, a cousin who was visiting for a sleepover.

Prouty, a local fisherman, was left badly injured by the fire. He was brought out of an induced coma two days later.

Last week, a spokeswoma­n for the provincial government confirmed the fire marshal’s investigat­ion had been completed, but she refused to release its basic findings, citing “privacy laws.”

The response from the Municipal Affairs Department, which oversees the Office of the Fire Marshal, was criticized by David Fraser, a legal expert in privacy issues, and journalism professor Fred Vallance-jones at Dalhousie University in Halifax.

Fraser said the province’s Freedom of Informatio­n and Protection of Privacy Act grants most public bodies broad discretion when it comes to disclosing informatio­n considered in the public interest, while protecting personal data.

Police, for example, often release the cause of death and victims’ names in murder cases. But the personal informatio­n in an autopsy is protected by the provincial statute, typically referred to as FOIPOP.

When a fire causes multiple deaths, it’s in the public interest to release the cause because such informatio­n can promote public safety, Fraser said.

Jeffers said his office is not in the habit of routinely releasing such informatio­n, but he confirmed basic findings have been released in the past when doing so was in the public interest.

As well, he stressed that his investigat­ion reports must first be vetted through the FOIPOP process before any informatio­n can be released. He agreed when asked if there needed to be more openness when it comes to releasing that informatio­n.

Jeffers, who has been fire marshal for over a year, would not say what changes his agency is contemplat­ing.

“We have an opportunit­y here to look at past practice ... and consider a better way forward. I don’t want to commit to any more than that right now.”

 ??  ??
 ?? ANDREW VAUGHAN/THE CANADIAN PRESS ?? An RCMP dog handler and a human remains detection dog search the scene of a house destroyed in a fire in Pubnico Head in January. Nova Scotia’s fire marshal says heat from a wood stove caused a fire last month that claimed the lives of four children....
ANDREW VAUGHAN/THE CANADIAN PRESS An RCMP dog handler and a human remains detection dog search the scene of a house destroyed in a fire in Pubnico Head in January. Nova Scotia’s fire marshal says heat from a wood stove caused a fire last month that claimed the lives of four children....

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada