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Boucher & Jones Fuels — Petro-Canada distributor

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TSSA TECHNICIANS & EQUIPMENT SERVICES ·  SOUTHWESTERN ONTARIO

Oil burner, petroleum-mechanic, and gas-technician work — through one provider.

TSSA-certified technicians for the fuel-side install, inspection, and service work that the Ontario regulations require. The post-acquisition team brings the Boucher & Jones long-standing certified roster together with the Davis & McCauley team that transferred intact in 2025.

01 / WHAT WE DELIVER

Three technician classes under Ontario’s fuel-industry regulations.

The right certificate is decided by the fuel and by the work. Same supplier, same office, same coverage area on all three.

OBT-1 · OBT-2 · OBT-3

Oil Burner Technicians

Fuel-oil installation, inspection, and service work — residential and small commercial. The OBT certificate stack is what the Ontario fuel-oil rules under O. Reg. 213/01 require for a contractor that touches the tank, the burner, or the connected piping. Used most on the home-heating side and on the 10-year inspection cycle.

Home heating overview
PM-1 · PM-2 · PM-3

Petroleum Mechanics

Aboveground and underground storage tank work — the install, the inspection, and the regulated mechanical work on a yard tank that fuels licensed vehicles under O. Reg. 217/01. PM.3 is the certificate Ontario’s Liquid Fuels Handling Code requires for AST installation. Used most on the fleet, commercial, and construction sides.

Tanks & equipment
G.1 · G.2 · G.3

Gas Technicians

Propane and natural-gas installation and service work under CSA B149.1 / B149.2 and O. Reg. 211/01. Gas Technician 3 covers smaller appliance work; G.2 covers the bulk of residential and commercial installs; G.1 covers the largest commercial and industrial systems. Used most on the propane bulk-tank side.

Propane details
02 / KNOW YOUR CERTIFICATE

The Ontario regulations behind the certificates.

SOURCEO. Reg. 215/01 · Fuel Industry Certificates
O. Reg. 216/01 · Petroleum Equipment Mechanics
CSA B139 · CSA B149.1 · CSA B149.2
Liquid Fuels Handling Code (LFHC-17)

OBT — Oil Burner Technician

A three-class stack under O. Reg. 215/01. OBT-1 covers oil burners up to 1.6 USGPH and is the certificate most residential oil-burner work is done under; OBT-2 extends the rating and adds heavy-oil categories; OBT-3 is the broadest scope. The certificate is what the regulation asks for when a contractor installs, inspects, or services an oil-fired appliance in Ontario.

PM — Petroleum Mechanic

A three-class stack under O. Reg. 216/01. PM-1 and PM-2 are the apprentice and intermediate steps; PM-3 is the journeyperson certificate required for AST and UST installation under the Liquid Fuels Handling Code. The yard-tank work for licensed-vehicle diesel — and the related labelling, piping, and dispenser — sits under this certificate.

G — Gas Technician

A three-class stack under O. Reg. 215/01 covering propane and natural-gas work. G.3 is the residential-appliance entry point; G.2 covers most residential and commercial installs up to 400,000 BTU/h; G.1 covers larger commercial and industrial systems. CSA B149.1 (installation) and CSA B149.2 (propane storage) are the technical codes the certificate enforces.

03 / WHAT THE TEAM DELIVERS

Where the certificates show up in the work.

Same supplier on the technician work as on the fuel — the conversation about the tank, the burner, the appliance, or the inspection runs through the same named rep that takes the delivery call.

  • The 10-year inspection cycle

    Both propane (CSA B149.2 / O. Reg. 211/01) and fuel oil (CSA B139 / O. Reg. 213/01) sit on a TSSA-administered 10-year inspection cycle. The supplier flags the upcoming requirement on the account; the inspection is run by an OBT (oil) or Gas Technician (propane) with the right class for the equipment. Supply continues when the inspection is in order.
  • Install and decommission

    New tank, new burner, replacement appliance, conversion from one fuel to another — the install runs through the certified contractor whose certificate matches the work. Decommissioning of a retired oil tank, with the proper purging and documentation, sits on the same certificate path. The supplier coordinates between the homeowner, the contractor, and the AHJ as needed.
  • Labels and Colour-Symbol bands

    Tanks go up labelled to Ontario Fire Code Part 4.3 and the Canadian Fuels Association Colour-Symbol System — red band for coloured diesel, white for clear, the propane and fuel-oil markings in their place. The labelling is part of the certified-mechanic install, not an after-the-fact add. The rep refreshes a weathered label on the next delivery.
  • Continuity through the Davis & McCauley transition

    Davis & McCauley’s TSSA-certified team transferred to B&J intact through the 2025 acquisition. The London-area work the team did under the Davis & McCauley name continues under the same trucks, the same phone numbers, and the same certified personnel — now on the same supplier as the fuel.

O. REG. 211/01 · O. REG. 213/01 · O. REG. 215/01 · O. REG. 216/01 · O. REG. 217/01
CSA B139 · CSA B149.1 · CSA B149.2

04 / FAQ

Questions we hear most often.

01Does Boucher & Jones employ the technicians directly?
The combined post-acquisition team includes TSSA-certified Oil Burner Technicians, Petroleum Mechanics, and Gas Technicians who carry the certificates the Ontario regulations require. Where a specific job calls for a certificate the in-house team does not carry, we work with TSSA-registered contractor partners across the nine-county footprint; the named rep on your account coordinates the introduction so the work still runs as one conversation.O. REG. 215/01 · O. REG. 216/01
02My oil tank is due for the 10-year inspection. Who runs it?
The inspection on the fuel-oil side is run by an OBT (Oil Burner Technician) whose certificate class matches the burner rating. The supplier flags the inspection date on the account with enough lead time to schedule the work before the deadline lands. Supply continues when the inspection is in order; an out-of-cycle account moves into a different supply posture until the work is done.O. REG. 213/01 · CSA B139
03My propane tank is due for inspection. Same path?
Same idea, different certificate. The 10-year inspection on the propane side is run by a TSSA-certified Gas Technician under CSA B149.2 and O. Reg. 211/01. The Director’s Order FS-271-24 in 2024 took the 200 psig tank population out of service on 1 October 2025; the supplier flags any tank on the account that crosses that line, and the conversation about replacement happens before the next refill.O. REG. 211/01 · CSA B149.2 · TSSA FS-271-24
04Can the team install a new yard tank for our service trucks?
Yes — through a TSSA-certified Petroleum Mechanic holding the PM.3 certificate, working to the Liquid Fuels Handling Code under O. Reg. 217/01. The tank is CAN/ULC-S601 for clear on-road diesel service. The install includes the labels, the colour-band marking, the piping, and the dispenser; the rep takes the site walk and quotes the work as one conversation.O. REG. 217/01 · CAN/ULC-S601 · LFHC-17
05What about the 2026 TSSA mobile-fuelling licence change?
The 2026 change adds an Appendix I licence and an annual fee that applies to mobile fuelling operations across Ontario. The customer-side implication on most accounts is small — the licence sits on the supplier’s side of the gate, while the setbacks and the spill notification path that the rule names were already good practice on a well-run site. The mobile-fuelling licence article walks the regulation in detail.TSSA APPENDIX I · ARTICLE
06I am in the London area and worked with Davis & McCauley. Where does that stand?
The Davis & McCauley TSSA-certified team transferred to B&J intact through the 2025 acquisition. The London-area work continues under the same trucks, the same phone numbers, and the same certified personnel — now on the same supplier as the fuel. The depot at 660 Clarke Road is the operational base; the named rep is the same person across the technician work and the standing-route delivery.OPERATIONS · DAVIS & McCAULEY TRANSITION
NEXT STEP ·  SOUTHWESTERN ONTARIO

Tell us about the equipment and the certificate it needs.

A named rep takes the call. Tell us what the work is — install, inspection, conversion, decommission — and what the appliance or tank is. We can usually settle the certificate, the contractor, and the schedule in one conversation.

05 / COVERAGE ·  SOUTHWESTERN ONTARIO · 9 REGIONS

Across southwestern Ontario, by named rep.

Standing routes across nine regions. Same rep year-round; after-hours emergencies route through the same number to the on-call team.

Check your area · Postal code
CITY PAGE ·  LONDON
SOUTHWESTERN ONTARIO · 9-REGION FOOTPRINT

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