![]() Propane torch and bonfire reportsĮarlier on Thursday afternoon, Halifax Mayor Mike Savage said there were reports of people within the previous 12 hours breaking the burn ban, including someone using a propane torch to burn leaves and another person starting a bonfire. The next update on the Halifax-area fires is expected Friday at 9 a.m. "This is important, this is about keeping each other safe, it's about helping out firefighters attend to the emergencies that are impacting all of us," Meldrum said. Meldrum said Halifax Fire will be doing more to enforce the provincewide burn ban that is in effect. He said firefighters are now being directed to report illegal burns to the fire prevention division so it can be followed up for enforcement, which likely means summary offence tickets to people who are not following the rules. Meldrum said wet towels were being used to help cool crew down because of the heat. ![]() ![]() "It's so terribly dry right now, it's a significant challenge," Halifax Regional Fire and Emergency Deputy Chief David Meldrum said in an update with reporters at 5 p.m. Halifax Fire officials said crews also had to respond to multiple motor vehicle collisions on Thursday. In addition to the large fire impacting the communities of Upper Tantallon, Hammonds Plains and Pockwock - which is currently 50 per cent contained - new fires erupted at the Waegwoltic Club in south-end Halifax and in wooded areas off Prospect Road and Perrin Drive in Waverley. Multiple fires throughout the Halifax area kept crews busy on Thursday afternoon as temperatures soared above 30 C and an 837-hectare wildfire in a suburb burned for a fourth day. It's our low-bandwidth, text-only website. If the power or data on your device is low, get your wildfire updates on CBC Lite.
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