Expanded open fire prohibitions planned for the Northwest Fire Centre



SMITHERS – Effective at 12:00 (noon) Pacific Daylight Time on Friday, June 19, 2026, Category 2 open fire prohibitions will be expanded across the entire Northwest Fire Centre. This includes the Nadina Forest District, Coast Mountain Forest District, and Skeena Stikine Forest District. Category 3 open fires remain prohibited across the Northwest Fire Centre.

A Category 2 open fire is a fire that burns:

  • Material in one pile not exceeding 2 metres in height and 3 metres in width
  • Material concurrently in 2 piles, each not exceeding 2 metres in height and 3 metres in width
  • Stubble or grass over an area that does not exceed 0.2 hectares (2,000 square metres)

A Category 3 open fire is a fire that burns:

  • Material concurrently in 3 or more piles, each not exceeding 2 metres in height and 3 metres in width
  • Material in one or more piles, each exceeding 2 metres in height or 3 metres in width
  • One or more windrows, not exceeding 200 metres in length or 15 metres in width
  • Stubble or grass over an area exceeding 0.2 hectares (2,000 square metres)

In addition to Category 2 and Category 3 open fires, the following activities will also be prohibited across the Northwest Fire Centre:

  • Binary exploding targets
  • Fireworks, as defined in the Fireworks Act of BC
  • Burn barrels or burn cages of any size or description
  • Controlled air incinerators
  • Air curtain burners
  • Carbonizers

Anyone conducting a Category 2 open fire, must extinguish it by June 19, 2026 at 12:00 (noon) PDT. This prohibition will remain in place until September 25, 2026, at 12:00 (noon) PDT, or until the public is otherwise notified.

Please view a map of the affected areas below.

The prohibitions apply to all areas that are outside of municipal boundaries and the following types of Crown land within municipal boundaries:

  • parks, conservancies and recreation areas (Park Act);
  • recreation sites, recreation trails, interpretive forest sites and trail-based recreation areas (Forest and Range Practices Act);
  • ecological reserves (Ecological Reserve Act);
  • wildlife management areas (Wildlife Act);
  • private managed forest land (Private Managed Forest Land Act); and
  • all lands in the District of Stewart municipality.

Municipalities may align with BC Wildfire Service prohibitions or impose their own prohibitions based on local conditions. If you are within a municipality, be sure to check if local prohibitions are in place. If you are within a regional district or improvement district, this prohibition applies as well as any local prohibitions issued by the regional district or improvement district. BC Parks follows BC Wildfire Service prohibitions.

This prohibition does not include Category 1 campfires. For more information on open burning, including a description of each category of burn, please click here.

Anyone found in contravention of an open fire prohibition may be issued a ticket for $1,150, required to pay an administrative penalty of $10,000, or, if convicted in court, fined up to $100,000 and/or sentenced for up to one year in jail.

If your fire causes or contributes to a wildfire, you may be fined up to $1 million and/or sentenced to up to three years in jail, as well as be responsible for all firefighting and associated costs. More information about the Wildfire Act and Regulation is available here.

The Northwest Fire Centre would like to thank the public for its continuing help in preventing wildfires. To report a wildfire call 1-800-663-5555 toll-free or *5555 on a cell phone. For up-to-date information on current wildfire activity and prohibitions visit www.bcwildfire.ca.

You can follow the latest wildfire news on:

Contact:
BC Wildfire Service
Information Officer
Northwest Fire Centre
BCWS.NWFCInfo@gov.bc.ca
250-876-6844

Connect with the Province of B.C. at www.gov.bc.ca/connect