Open Outdoor Fire definition

Open Outdoor Fire means the burning or smoldering of any combustible material of any type outdoors in the open air, either inside or outside a fireproof container, where the products of combustion are not directed through a chimney or flue.
Open Outdoor Fire means the combustion of combustible material of any type outdoors in the open, not in any enclosure, where the products of combustion are not directed through a flue.
Open Outdoor Fire or "open burning" means combustion in the outdoors of any material, during which the products of combustion are not directed through a flue, chimney, duct, vent, stack, or other restrictive device designed or installed for the principle purpose of discharging the effluent to the atmosphere.

Examples of Open Outdoor Fire in a sentence

  • Notwithstanding the provisions of section (C)(8), a person may burn or permit an Open Outdoor Fire for any of the following purposes, provided such fire is set by, or under the jurisdiction of, a designated fire agency having jurisdiction over the proposed burn location(s), the total area burned with Prescribed Burns within the District does not exceed 1,000 acres in any one day, and a valid burn permit has been issued, or a Smoke Management Plan has been approved, by the District.

  • Except as otherwise provided for in this Rule, no person shall set, permit, or use an Open Outdoor Fire for the purpose of disposal or burning of petroleum wastes; asbestos; treated wood; demolition or construction debris; residential rubbish; garbage or vegetation; tires; tar; trees; wood waste; or other combustible or flammable solid, liquid or gaseous waste; or for metal salvage or burning of motor vehicle bodies.

  • The number of positions offered is very low compared to the number of students registered in medical school13.

  • A person shall not set or permit an Open Outdoor Fire for Agricultural Burning when prohibited by District Rule 701 or in any geographic area when CARB or the APCO (or the local fire protection agency, in the case of an existing burn permit) prohibits burning in that area due to adverse meteorological conditions (No-burn day), unless such burning is required to alleviate an Imminent and Substantial Economic Loss and the total area burned within the District on that day does not exceed 200 acres.

  • Ordinance No. 2014-05 the Open Outdoor Fire Ordinance, is hereby repealed in its entirety.


More Definitions of Open Outdoor Fire

Open Outdoor Fire means any fire not contained within the confines of an approved outdoor or indoor appliance, building or structure and includes fires burning in humus soil, piles of coal, manure, farm produce, wastes, feed and straw, and means that the fire is a controlled fire under the supervision of the land owner or adult designate.
Open Outdoor Fire means any fire ignited in the open, including in a burn barrel, or in any device other than a multiple-chamber incinerator, as defined in Rule 2.
Open Outdoor Fire as used in this rule, means any combustion of combustible material of any type outdoors, in the open where the products of combustion are not directed through a flue. “Flue,” as used in this rule, means any duct or passage for air, gases or the like, such as a stack or chimney.
Open Outdoor Fire means any burning, oxidation, or combustion of combustible material of any type in the open where the products of combustion are not directed through a flue.
Open Outdoor Fire means any burning, oxidation or combustion of combustible material of any type in the open where the products of combustion are not directed through a flue, but not including campfires and charcoal fires.
Open Outdoor Fire means combustion of any combustible material of any type outdoors, in the open where the prod- ucts of combustion are not directed through a flue. "Flue" means any duct or passage for air, gases or the like, such as a stack or chimney.
Open Outdoor Fire means any combustion of combustible material of any type outdoors, in the open where the products of combustion are not directed through a flue. Cutting torches. welding, open flames used in the maintenance and repair of stationary or mobile equipment, coal fires, explosives, fuses and blasting agents used in the quarry and torches used to ignite the Kiln 1-4 or Kiln 6 main burners are not open outdoor fires.