Crime & Safety

Fire Marshal Addresses Burn Ban Enforcement In Jenkintown

Residents will face fines starting at $100 for any violations of the burn ban put in place in Montgomery County, borough officials said.

Jenkintown's Fire Marshal will enforce burn ban violations with fines starting at $100 for residents.
Jenkintown's Fire Marshal will enforce burn ban violations with fines starting at $100 for residents. (Bucks County )

JENKINTOWN, PA —Residents who violate the Montgomery County burn ban may face fines starting at $100, borough officials said.

The Jenkintown Borough Fire Marshal said that the Montgomery County Board of Commissioners unanimously approved a resolution enacting a 30-day countywide ban on open fires, effective Nov. 16.

The ban includes recreational fires in fire pits, the fire marshal said.

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Violations will be enforced by the fire marshal and the Jenkintown Borough Police Department.

Anyone with questions should contact the fire marshal at 215-885-0700. Residents can also send an email to klynch@jenkintownboro.com.

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Open fires are defined as the ignition and subsequent burning of any combustible material (garbage, leaves, grass, twigs, litter, paper, vegetative matter involved with land clearing, or any sort of debris) outdoors in either a burn barrel (screened or unscreened), fire ring, or on the ground.

The use of propane or gas stoves, charcoal briquette grills, or the use of tobacco in any form is still permitted. Other exemptions are provided for normal agricultural operations, agricultural-related business operations, candle lighting, and other small contained burning (matches, lighters, candles) used for religious reasons.

"Montgomery County has suffered an unprecedented lack of rainfall and drought-like conditions for the majority of the past three months," said Jason Wilson, Deputy Director for Emergency Management at the Montgomery County Department of Public Safety. "These abnormally dry conditions and persistent lack of rainfall pose a great public safety concern by way of brush, wildland, and forest fires. As of today, Montgomery County fire companies have responded to over 300 reported brush and vegetation fires since the beginning of September, which have destroyed many acres of both natural and developed land."

Similar restrictions on open burning are also in effect in the neighboring counties of Berks, Bucks, Chester, Delaware, and Lehigh, as well as in more than 25 other counties across the Commonwealth.

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