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Wildfire warning issued to landowners

 

Firefighters from Shannon and Ennis at Woodcock Hill on Sunday – Photo: © Pat Flynn 2018

Following gorse fires in O’Gonnelloe and Cratloe at the weekend, Clare County Fire and Rescue Service is asking landowners and the general public to refrain from any outdoor burning during the ongoing spell of hot weather.

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The Fire Service has warned that any outside burning can spread to private and State-owned forestry plantations and jeopardise the safety of dwellings and families living in rural areas.

Landowners are being reminded that Section 40 of the Wildlife Acts 1976 to 2012 prohibits the cutting, grubbing, burning or destruction of vegetation, with certain strict exemptions, from 1 March to 31 August during the nesting and breeding season for birds and wildlife.

Adrian Kelly, Clare Chief Fire Officer says the Department of Agriculture has issued a ‘Condition Orange – High Fire Risk for Forest Fires’ while Met Éireann currently has a High-Temperature warning in place.

He added, “We would like to remind landowners that it is an offence under the Wildlife Act to burn growing vegetation between 1 March and 31 August in any year, on any land not then cultivated. The sad fact is that if this simple rule was adhered to, many costly and dangerous wildfires would be avoided.”

Details of the laws in relation to burning are available on the Clare County Council website, www.clarecoco.ie or the Department of Agriculture and Food website, www.agriculture.gov.ie.

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