Interesting reading,
We live in California; Sacramento to be precise. While the winters aren't normally freezing, we do see the 20's. When we moved from a small bungalow style house downtown to a two story in the county, we found the two fireplaces, one up and one downstairs, were not practical, and one not enough. So we added an osburn 2200 with the bay window for aesthetics, and after a learning curve, made it work. A couple years ago, the county began implementing "no burn", and "burn cleanly only" days for home fires. They set the standards for particulates, and the time runs fromNovember through early march. So if there's no particulate problem, you can burn any day, and if there's slight particulate problem, you are only supposed to burn if you have an EPA certified insert or stove. And of course, there are "no burn" days when the particulate is supposedly bad. The county implemented a complaint process for neighbors or maybe joggers or whatever to report fires on no burn days. They do act on complaints, as I know someone who was cited last year. First time is 50.00 fine. They also do roaming patrols from time to time, but that is according to them. I believe it though. My wife and I just applied for a waiver due to financial hardship, because our gas and electric bill, as well as our installed equipment is need ...well, more financing. the waiver form asks lots of personal information too. I collected about 4 cords of wood from free sources this summer, oak, walnut, and eucalyptus, and having invested all the time and back breaking labor, I think it's best we use it. This home heating crackdown is a bit of an intrusion, and wouldn't be a necessity at all if the state would stop importing more people to pollute the air. Obviously the plan is to take away the quality of life for the existing residents and redistribute it as many new mouth from mecksico that might end up willing to pay whatever taxes and put up with whatever the bureaucracy dishes out or requires of them.
Anyway, the looming concern is that soon the county will install various detectors to find fires similar to those now in use in towns like Palo alto that sniff out gunfire. What's probably coming is a permitting process for fireplaces that will be fee based, so fires will end up a novelty instead of a staple. I have a sneaking suspicion that it is not so much the particulate in the air and it's relation to our health that's at issue. I say that because at the same time the restrictions are going into effect, the county is releasing criminals by the trainload due to budget cuts. The point being, they just don't think that highly of us to protect our health, as more people die from criminals than smoke related problems.
For those who think it's just those crazy Californians, don't live in blissful ignorance too long, because this is spreading all over the US. The feds are the onse pushing this on the states, and the states requiring it of the counties. And by the way; the feds don't think that highly of your health either, as they voluntarily let a couple millions criminals from south of the border have free rein in your country knowing full well they are killing and injuring thousands more Americans than die of smoke inhalation each year also. I have my own speculative reasons as to why they would like to see fire burners snuffed out, or at least cut back in draconian fashion, but lest I sound like a conspiracy theorist, I shall forgo that for now. The point was, you are next eventually
I hope we get our waiver this year, as I am getting pretty learned on the use of this osburn unit. The one problem I believe we have though, is the need for a flue control. the chimney stack is pretty high being that this is a two story, and I think the resulting draft is pulling too much of our heat out now.