CFC representative to be on hand from now on for all open burns

NORTH CANAAN — A look at the town’s burning ordinance was conducted in recent months in the wake of several incidents of illegal burning. It was determined the regulations for residential property (commercial burning is not allowed) were not flawed. The problem is people don’t understand them or choose to ignore them. The answer: a means of enforcement that extends beyond a burn permit that puts public safety at the mercy of the permit holder. The new plan also provides a revenue source for the Canaan Fire Company (CFC), which often ends up responding to burn situations that get out of hand.Violators typically are found to be burning wood that is larger than allowed, leaving fires unattended and/or burning beyond the 4 p.m. deadline. A moratorium on open burning was put in place by the Board of Selectmen last year after a June 1 fire destroyed a barn at an East Canaan Road residence. An illegal burn a couple of houses away could not be proven as the source. But the heat plume created by the fire was sending sparks high into the air.When Fire Marshal Michael Fitting arrived on the scene, he investigated the neighbor’s burn, found logs on the fire and ordered it extinguished by fire departments responding to the barn fire.The resident, who had hired a crew to burn brush, had a valid permit. But nonrecreational fires are limited to limbs no larger than 4 inches in diameter, per standards set by the state Department of Energy and Environmental Protection.That was the third illegal fire discovered in a year. The two prior resulted in a brush fire, and a man being seriously burned.Fitting said at the time that the problem was a disjointed system of oversight and jurisdiction. Residents are required to secure a permit in advance, call the burning official on the day of to check that weather and fire index conditions are appropriate, follow guidelines for materials and safety measures as specified in the permit, start after 8 a.m. and complete the burn or extinguish it by 4 p.m.No one was checking on those fires before ignition, during the day, or after 4 p.m. Inspections are also important during the day to ensure no banned materials are added and that the fires remain monitored. They are also needed when conditions change and make it dangerous to burn.First Selectman Douglas Humes said last week nothing was changed in the 2002 Open Burning Ordinance. Instead, CFC will now designate a burning official and a team of volunteers to monitor open burns. “There are plenty of fire company members who are around town during the day,” Humes said, “so they can easily handle it, and make a little extra money for the fire company. This way is a lot better than them having to go out and fight a fire.”The town and CFC will split the $20 burn permit fee.The fine for a permit violation remains at $250 and a ban from burning for six months. The fire department that responds to an illegal burn receives the collected fine. Deputy Chief Brian Allyn will be in charge of issuing permits and will oversee burn inspections.Fire Marshal/Burning Official Daryl Byrne said he will remain in both posts.“The burning official falls under the fire marshal’s office,” he said. “That was started by John Foley when he was fire marshal, and I adopted the practice. People will still need to come into my office in Town Hall for permit applications and to pay the fee.”Byrne said he requested an amendment to the town ordinance to bring it in compliance with state statutes. It currently does not match the allowed burn times designated by the state. It also needs to include a requirement for the daily air quality index to be taken into consideration on the day of a burn. That amendment would require a vote at a town meeting.

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