'I've got something to protect,' he told CBC News after a final report on Yukon's fire services. It is simply to provide them with something better than running over there with their little kitchen fire extinguisher or their, you know, three-quarter-inch garden hose." "It is not to replace the phone call for 911 or for help to come from a neighbouring community. "There would be no formal training program. It would not be up to the Yukon government to fix or replace items, he said. The community would then own it, and its maintenance would be the community's responsibility.
TOP GEAR SEASON 10 EPISODE 1 HOTEL PORTABLE
Jolley said the concept is to provide a set of equipment, such as hoses, portable pumps, shovels, axes, nozzles, and other items either in a container or on the back of a pickup truck, for example, a surplus truck from the government. The report says it's not intended to be a formal organization, nor should it be considered a replacement for a fire department if one can be supported. The idea, the report says, is to "provide small remote communities with the tools internally to provide neighbour-to-neighbour assistance in the event of fire when there is no capacity to staff a volunteer fire department." He said it could help the territory's smallest communities to have "basic capability" to limit fire spread in the event of structure fire. (Amber Smith) 'Fire protection in a box'Īmong the 104 recommendations from the new report, one of the top priorities according to Don Jolley, principal and founder at Response Specialties Consulting, is implementing a "fire protection in a box" concept.
The community is described in the letter as an old wooden historical community with no volunteer fire department, and it said residents had to contact a volunteer force from Mayo, Yukon, about an hour's drive away, to respond to the hotel fire.Ī house fire in Keno City in February. It said a fire truck was removed from the community without notice in April 2019. Keno City is home to a few dozen residents and the Keno City Hotel was an iconic landmark in the former mining boomtown.Īt the time, an open letter was addressed to the premier, ministers and the fire marshal, by the Keno City residents' group. The new report comes after a group representing residents of Keno City, Yukon, called for an independent public inquiry into the state of fire protection last December, after a fire destroyed the community's beloved hotel. The Occupational Health and Safety Regulation as well as the Fire Prevention Act need to be reviewed and updated, it says. The report says some of Yukon's legislation related to fire services is dated and not consistent with current practice. The firm and the territory held a technical briefing on Thursday about the report. Small and remote Yukon communities like Keno City could benefit from a "neighbour-to-neighbour" fire control plan, according to a recent review of Yukon's fire services.Ī 152-page report was completed by Response Specialties Consulting firm, under contract to the Yukon government's Department of Community Services.