Close X
Thursday, September 19, 2024
ADVT 
National

B.C. Coroners Service reports 36 outdoor deaths to start year, 5 on cold Jan. 12

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 18 Jan, 2024 02:20 PM
  • B.C. Coroners Service reports 36 outdoor deaths to start year, 5 on cold Jan. 12

British Columbia's Coroners Service is reporting the outdoor deaths of 36 people during the early days of January when the province was in the grip of a record-breaking cold snap.

Coroners Service data for the days from Jan. 1 to 16 show the highest number of people dying on Jan. 12, a day when numerous low temperature records were broken across B.C.

The service says five people died on Jan. 12, where temperatures at Puntzi Mountain, west of Williams Lake, neared -50 C, while Victoria broke a 61-year-old record with a temperature of -10.7 C.

But the death rate isn't much different from last year, when the service says 34 people died in the same period when the temperature in Metro Vancouver on Jan. 12 was 10 C. 

The coroners service says this year's outdoor deaths, which are still under investigation, include those that occur in public spaces, on streets or sidewalks, in parking lots, parks, trails and campgrounds. 

Late last year, the coroners service reported more than 600 people experiencing homelessness in B.C. died in 2021 and 2022, a sharp increase in the annual average of 183 deaths.

MORE National ARTICLES

Surrey RCMP launches new tool to spread awareness about gang violence

Surrey RCMP launches new tool to spread awareness about gang violence
R-C-M-P in Surrey are using a new tool to educate young people about gang violence in the hopes of discouraging their involvement in them. Officers from the Mounties' gang enforcement team will be sharing a new video specifically created for Surrey youth during school presentations.

Surrey RCMP launches new tool to spread awareness about gang violence

Suspect wanted in Victoria restaurant arson

Suspect wanted in Victoria restaurant arson
Police in Victoria are looking for help in identifying a suspect wanted in an arson that damaged a local restaurant. They say fire broke out the early morning hours of June 16th at a restaurant on Douglas Street, resulting in damages estimated at between 1.5-million to two-million-dollars.  

Suspect wanted in Victoria restaurant arson

Patrol increase in Maple Ridge due to thefts

Patrol increase in Maple Ridge due to thefts
Mounties in Maple Ridge say they'll be increasing patrols in the downtown core after an uptick in break and enters and thefts. The Ridge Meadows R-C-M-P say the slight increase has been seen over the last month.  

Patrol increase in Maple Ridge due to thefts

B.C. hospital admissions break record as respiratory illness season nears peak

B.C. hospital admissions break record as respiratory illness season nears peak
British Columbia's health minister says hospitals are dealing with a record number of in-patients as the province's respiratory illness season nears its peak. Health Minister Adrian Dix told a briefing that 10,435 people were in hospital as of Tuesday night, the most the province has ever seen, and many have respiratory illnesses.

B.C. hospital admissions break record as respiratory illness season nears peak

Conservatives call for ethics probe into Justin Trudeau's free Jamaican holiday stay

Conservatives call for ethics probe into Justin Trudeau's free Jamaican holiday stay
Conservative MP and ethics critic Michael Barrett sent a letter to Konrad von Finckenstein on Tuesday asking whether he knew Trudeau was staying at a luxury estate owned by a family friend. Barrett says the vacation is "not the equivalent of staying at a friend's home" calling it instead a gift with commercial value.

Conservatives call for ethics probe into Justin Trudeau's free Jamaican holiday stay

People with private drug coverage more likely to stick to prescriptions: StatCan

People with private drug coverage more likely to stick to prescriptions: StatCan
A new Statistics Canada study confirms that financial limitations are keeping people without private or employer-sponsored drug coverage from following through with their prescriptions. It's true for both those who have no coverage at all but also people who have some coverage through provincial or existing federal prescription programs.  

People with private drug coverage more likely to stick to prescriptions: StatCan