Police are urging landowners to be careful when conducting private burns.
Photo by
Ray Sizer
Victoria Police is urging Moira Shire landowners to remain within the conditions of their permit when conducting burns on their property.
Hold tight - we’re checking permissions before loading more content
Cobram police’s senior sergeant Nathan Ractliffe said the risk of out-of-control permit burns was a massive concern.
“We need landowners to know that these fires can get out of hand,” he said.
“It’s a risk to the community, to road users, and a risk to peoples’ livelihoods, businesses and critical infrastructure like power lines.”
A number of call-outs were made to the CFA last year after permits burns became out of control.
A spokesperson has confirmed that between January 1 and March 18 this year, the CFA responded to 28 vegetation fires within the Moira Shire.
“We’ve had a number of controlled burns get out of control, which means the CFA is paged, and property damage may occur,” Sen Sgt Ractliffe said.
“Ultimately, we can deem that there may be criminality or negligence of the landowner not having kept their burns under control.”
Under the Country Fire Authority Act 1958, penalties for allowing an open-air fire to escape during a declared Fire Danger Period can include fines of up to $23,710, 12 months’ imprisonment, or both.
Penalties double if the escape occurs on a Total Fire Ban Day.
District 22 Commander Rod Railton.
Photo by
Rechelle Zammit
The reminder comes after a growing number of reports of CFA brigades being called to attend permit burns after callers mistook them for out-of-control fires.
CFA District 22 Commander Rod Railton said while the agency hadn’t reported any out-of-control permit burns in the Moira Shire this year, the issue of permit burns mistaken as uncontrolled fires by the public was complex.
“We don’t want to stop people reporting fires. But they need to be aware that, at the moment, permits are in force,” he said.
All registered permit burns are recorded by the CFA so that emergency call-takers know the address of a legal burn-off.
But if a caller knows only the general location of a fire and not its precise address, the CFA is legally required to send a brigade out regardless.
It means that response times to actual out-of-control fires are lengthened.
“We’re calling our volunteers out unnecessarily at all times of the night, and when we’re responding to these fires it lessens our coverage to areas that actually may have a fire,” Mr Railton said.
There are ways to determine whether a fire is registered or not.
For instance, a vehicle with a flashing amber light will be at the scene of a registered burn.
Currently, the light-up time for the district is 6pm each day.
That time, which the CFA reviews with senior firefighters each week, will be brought forward earlier and earlier as daylight saving comes to an end next month.