---
title: What 80 Fire Code Convictions Tell Ontario Property Owners
description: 80 Ontario fire code convictions from 2009 to 2026. Median fine of $11,250,
  escalating sharply for repeat offences and fatalities.
source: Duty Room
source_url: https://dutyroom.com
published_on: '2026-03-31'
updated_on: '2026-03-31'
market: ca
submarket: 'on'
sectors:
- all
category: longitudinal
canonical_url: https://dutyroom.com/ca/on/reports/fire-code-enforcement
data_vintage: 2009-2026
---

# What 80 Fire Code Convictions Tell Ontario Property Owners

80 Ontario fire code convictions from 2009 to 2026. Median fine of $11,250, escalating sharply for repeat offences and fatalities.

One Welland owner went from a $5,000 fire-code conviction in 2022 to $287,500 in January 2026. Same building, same fire alarm and fire separation failures. That's the pattern to watch in Ontario fire-code enforcement: ignore an order, get prosecuted again, and the next fine jumps.

That case sits at the top of 80 convictions compiled from court records, municipal press releases, and news reports across Ontario between 2009 and 2026. Seventy-five include explicit fine amounts. Six include jail sentences.

## Most fines stay low until the facts get worse

| Metric | Amount |
|--------|-------:|
| Cases with fines | 75 |
| Minimum fine | $295 |
| Maximum fine | $350,000 |
| Median fine | $11,250 |
| Mean fine | $31,500 |

The $11,250 median is pulled down by a long run of smoke-alarm and CO-alarm cases in the $500 to $20,000 range. Once a fatal fire or repeat offence enters the file, the numbers jump. Fatal fires, repeat offenders, and multi-unit properties regularly produce fines of $25,000 to $100,000 or more.

The $350,000 case involved an illegal rooming house at 244 Gladstone Ave in Toronto, where a fire critically injured two people. The owner paid $290,000 in fines plus $70,000 in costs.

## The escalation pattern

Welland's prosecution record makes the escalation visible. The city prosecuted fire code cases across multiple properties in 2022, 2023, 2024, 2025, and 2026. The fines tell the story:

- August 2022: $5,000 (missing smoke and CO alarms)
- April 2023: $12,500 (same property, same failures)
- September 2023: $31,250 (different property, fire separations and inoperable alarms)
- September 2023: $18,750 (obstructing fire marshal assistant)
- May 2024: $44,000+ across three properties
- November 2024: $25,000 (no smoke or CO alarms after a fire)
- January 2026: $287,500 (the cumulative case)
- January 2026: $22,000 (different property, same fire alarm issues)

Port Colborne shows the same curve on a smaller scale: low early fines, then a $100,000 case after a fatal fire killed four people at 53 Nickel St.

## Six people went to jail

Imprisonment for fire code violations is not theoretical in Ontario. Six documented cases:

| Defendant | Location | Sentence | Context |
|-----------|----------|----------|---------|
| R v. Singh | Ontario | 3 years | Failed to ensure rental property met fire code |
| Stephen Birch | Hamilton | 135 days | 4th conviction for fire code violations at lodging houses |
| Unnamed owner | Sault Ste. Marie | 90 days | 9 offences: fire separations, safety plan, wiring, HVAC, drills, CO alarms |
| Hung Viet Le | Guelph | 50 days | Fatal fire killed 2 women; no smoke detectors |
| Luciano Brancalion | Hamilton | 14 days | Fatal house fire; no smoke alarms in hallways |
| Sean Paul Cowling | Peterborough | 7 days | Repeat offender; rooming house lacking required exits |

The 3-year sentence is the outlier. Most jail terms cluster around two triggers: repeat breaches and fatal fires.

## Public convictions capture a fraction of enforcement

The 80 cases in this data are the ones that made it into news coverage or municipal press releases. The actual enforcement volume is far larger.

Toronto alone laid 915 charges and inspected 9,268 properties in 2024. Mississauga logged more than 17,000 inspections the same year. Most of that activity never becomes a public conviction.

Most fire-code enforcement stops earlier than prosecution, at orders and follow-up visits. The convictions emerge when those earlier steps fail.

## Where the cases concentrate

Rooming houses and multi-unit rental properties dominate the conviction data. The pattern is consistent: an owner converts a single-family home into multiple rental units, skips the fire code upgrades required for the new occupancy type, and gets caught when a complaint, a fire, or a routine inspection reveals the gaps.

Toronto, Hamilton, Welland, Port Colborne, Sault Ste. Marie, and the Niagara Region produce the most cases. These are municipalities with active fire prevention divisions and enough enforcement resources to follow through from inspection to prosecution. The absence of cases from other municipalities likely reflects enforcement capacity, not compliance.

Restaurants and bars appear in the data too. A Hamilton restaurant (Rannush Grill) was fined $10,000 for failing to inspect and test its suppression system and emergency lighting. An Italian restaurant and bar (Ora Italian Grill) in Hamilton received $4,000 for overcrowding, obstructed exits, and combustible materials near a fire escape. A Brantford gentlemen's club paid $4,000 for uninspected fire extinguishers, alarm systems, and kitchen ventilation.

## The cost beyond the fine

Every conviction fine attracts a mandatory 25% victim fine surcharge. A $50,000 fine becomes $62,500. Court costs typically add $1,000 to $5,000. In one Toronto case (96 Rivalda Dr), the owner paid $93,000 in fines plus $137,000 in cost recovery for chemical removal.

Civil liability adds another layer. A $1.3 million civil judgment was awarded against a Toronto rooming house owner after a tenant died in a fire. Insurance implications, business interruption from closure orders, and probation conditions that can prohibit managing rental properties all compound the financial exposure.

Fire protection service companies face prosecution too. Advanced Detection Technologies Corp and York Fire Protection were fined $67,500 collectively for not properly inspecting and testing fire alarm systems. The prosecution reached beyond the building owner to the company hired to maintain compliance.

## New enforcement tool: AMPs from January 2026

From January 2026, municipalities that adopt AMPs under Ontario Regulation 260/25 can fine routine fire-code failures without waiting for prosecution. Not all municipalities have adopted them yet, but the tool is available province-wide.

Repeat corporate offences can now reach $1.5 million, and failure to comply with an order carries a daily penalty of up to $20,000. Set fines for smoke alarm and CO alarm tickets run $195 to $295.

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Published by [Duty Room](https://dutyroom.com/ca/on/), software for organizing, tracking, and evidencing operational compliance.