RANGES TRADER STAR MAIL
Home » Mail » Burning issues openly aired

Burning issues openly aired

By MARLENE MILLOTT

THERE is community concern over the impact that open air burning has on human health in the Dandenong Ranges.
Olinda resident David Chauval is concerned about the exposure of Dandenong Ranges residents to harmful carcinogens when they breathe in smoke that comes from open air burning. He cites World Health Organisation findings that reveal a connection between air pollution and cancer-causing substances.
Mr Chauval in particular cites a WHO report from last year that found sufficient evidence that outdoor pollution causes lung cancer.
“The air we breathe has become polluted with a mixture of cancer-causing substances,” Dr Kurt Straif, from the WHO’s International Agency for Research on Cancer said in a statement.
“We now know that outdoor air pollution is not only a major risk to health in general, but also a leading environmental cause of cancer deaths.”
Mr Chauval asks the Dandenong Ranges community to consider current open air burning practices and question whether they are safe.
“How many of you have suffered from, or are suffering from, serious medical conditions such as stroke or cancer that may be, based on the WHO’s findings, linked to outdoor air pollution? How often have you witnessed breaches the Yarra Ranges Council’s Open Air Burning Local Laws without any accountability?” he asks.
“Frankly, no one should have the right to unreasonably pollute the air that we all have to breath.”
In addition to health concerns, Mr Chauval is worried about the impact on tourism in the area. He believes efforts to promote the Dandenong Ranges as a beautiful destination for dining and recreation is under threat.
“These efforts are thwarted when there are heavy layers of noxious smoke that affect the views and smell like ‘eau de bushfire’.”
Mr Chauval, who has been lobbying the local council to change the Open Air Burning Law, said he was told there were no plans to change the law.
He is calling on the local council to strengthen regulations on open air burning, and look into alternative measures of bushfire fuel reduction.
Current Yarra Ranges Council restrict the days and conditions in which residents that live in residential bushland and rural areas can burn off.
Residents in urban areas are not permitted to burn off at all. For more information on these regulations, see the Yarra Ranges Council website.
The Yarra Ranges Council was contacted for comment but did not respond before deadline.

Digital Editions


  • A final run home for Jake

    A final run home for Jake

    A Belgrave runner will begin a journey that has never been attempted before on Friday 27 February, taking on six loops of the Megasaw, a…

More News

  • Cartoon: Hot Cold

    Cartoon: Hot Cold

    Award winning, Healesville based cartoonist Danny Zemp makes light of the wildly fluctuating temperatures in the past week.

  • Reminder to update your pet registration

    Reminder to update your pet registration

    Yarra Ranges Council are encouraging residents to do a quick check-in for their furry friends if anything has changed since you last updated your pet’s registration details. Spending a few…

  • Discovering Dunedin

    Discovering Dunedin

    Having explored the tourist meccas of the South Island of New Zealand (Queenstown and Christchurch) I thought it was time to venture further afield and head to the more hidden…

  • $7000 to support the second year of the Queer Youth Writers Collective

    $7000 to support the second year of the Queer Youth Writers Collective

    The Yarra Ranges Queer Youth Writers Collective (QYWC) formed in 2025 and is making a return this year for keen young writers in the LGBTQIA+ community. The group has also…

  • Three… ways to support those affected by the bushfires

    Three… ways to support those affected by the bushfires

    Donate to relief efforts The 2026 Victorian Bushfire Appeal, launched by the state government, is collecting donations that go 100 per cent to fire-affected communities. The government has said it…

  • Cognoscenti: A neighbourhood restaurant built on friendship, food and wine

    Cognoscenti: A neighbourhood restaurant built on friendship, food and wine

    Cognoscenti is the kind of restaurant that feels both thoughtfully crafted and comfortably familiar — a place where quality food, a considered wine list and genuine hospitality come together without…

  • More than just a game at Monbulk Bowling Club

    More than just a game at Monbulk Bowling Club

    Purchase this photo from Pic Store: 290953 Bowling enthusiasts and casual revellers alike, brace yourselves for an unforgettable experience at the Monbulk Bowling Club, located at 11 Moores Road, Monbulk.…

  • Bayswater volunteers deployed to Walwa and Longwood fires

    Bayswater volunteers deployed to Walwa and Longwood fires

    Over the past week, firefighters have been flat out, both locally and across the state, helping communities impacted by ongoing bushfires. Bayswater CFA sent a tanker and more than 20…

  • Alleged stolen vehicle smashes into Olinda stores

    Alleged stolen vehicle smashes into Olinda stores

    An allegedly stolen vehicle crashed straight into the front of Rubies and Rust and Touchstone Craft Gallery on Olinda-Monbulk Road in Olinda in the early hours of Friday morning, 16…

  • Hills ink hits skin

    Hills ink hits skin

    Purchase this photo from Pic Store: 522198 Connection and art have driven a somewhat special project that saw two artists from different worlds come together across mediums. Friends with long-term…