People who deliberately breach a fire ban in the Far North can expect to be charged with arson and get a bill for the cost of extinguishing the blaze, a senior rural fire boss says.
A prohibited fire season was announced for the Far North yesterday as ground conditions dried out and elevated the fire risk. It means no fires can be lit.
Northern principal rural fire officer Myles Taylor said rural firefighters had been working since Boxing Day on fires, many of which had started with non-permitted fires.
But, where possible, the fire authority would now recover costs from those responsible and, in serious cases, the fire-starters would be prosecuted.
There was a precedent set in Northland last year when the person who started a major fire at Coopers Beach last New Year's Eve by firing a flare into a nature reserve was convicted of arson.