Nova Scotia

CBRM firefighters want to hand out tickets to drivers who park in fire lanes

Fire officials in Cape Breton Regional Municipality plan to reach out to the province to see if fire prevention officers can issue fines to drivers who park in fire lanes, the deputy fire chief says.

After yearlong campaign, residents continue to break the rules

A car parked in a fire lane outside a business in Sydney, N.S. Behind the car is a sign that says "no parking"
Fire officials in Cape Breton say vehicles that block the fire lane are putting residents, business owners and firefighters at risk. (Matthew Moore/CBC)

After a yearlong campaign aimed at stopping drivers from parking in fire lanes, Cape Breton Regional Fire and Emergency Services is looking to take the next step to stop the practice.

The department said it plans to ask the province for permission to allow fire prevention officers to hand out tickets to offenders.

"Our prevention operators are already special constables with the province so that they can enforce building codes as well as burning regulations," said Craig MacNeil, the deputy fire chief.

Now the department wants them "to be able to provide some of the enforcement."

While MacNeil could not recall an instance in which a vehicle blocked access while firefighters were responding to an emergency, he said he wants to avoid such a scenario.

Three vehicles are parked in front of a department store in the fire lane.
Fire officials say they are looking into getting the jurisdiction to write fines for fire-lane offenders. (Matthew Moore/CBC)

During the campaign last summer, traffic service Const. Brian Barkhouse said Cape Breton Police had handed out dozens of tickets.

"We issued approximately about 40 tickets over those few hours sporadically over the couple of weeks within all the three divisions of the municipality," he said.

Both MacNeil and Barkhouse say local business owners should either alert the offending drivers when they park in a fire lane or notify police.

"Businesses have to be more cognizant to report those issues to the police so that we know where the problems are," Barkhouse said.

Add some “good” to your morning and evening.

Get the latest top stories from across Nova Scotia in your inbox every weekday.

...

The next issue of CBC Nova Scotia newsletter will soon be in your inbox.

Discover all CBC newsletters in the Subscription Centre.opens new window

This site is protected by reCAPTCHA and the Google Privacy Policy and Google Terms of Service apply.