Close X
Thursday, December 12, 2024
ADVT 
National

B.C. Forestry Company To Suspend Operations For One Day After Workplace Death

The Canadian Press, 28 Feb, 2016 03:41 PM
    PORT MCNEILL, B.C. — A man is dead following what a forestry company is calling a "tragic accident" at one of its operations on northern Vancouver Island.
     
    TimberWest Forest Corp. spokeswoman Monica Bailey said an equipment operator was killed Friday afternoon at the company's Bonanza Lake site near Port McNeill.
     
    Bailey would not provide the cause of death, saying only the man was moving his equipment at the time.
     
    "Forest communities tend to be very small and people who work in forestry tend to know one another quite well," she said.
     
    "It's a heartbreaking moment for all community members on the Island and for forestry in general."
     
    The man was employed by one of TimberWest's contractors.
     
    In a statement, TimberWest CEO Jeff Zweig described the event a tragic accident.
     
    "We express our deepest sympathies to the family, friends and colleagues touched by this," Zweig said. "Our industry is tightly knit and the pain from this loss is felt throughout.”
     
    The company will suspend operations across the province Monday out of respect for those involved in the incident, Bailey said.
     
    TimberWest would not confirm it would be launching its own investigation, but Bailey said the company would work with employees and contractors to prevent future deaths.
     
    WorkSafeBC and the RCMP are investigating the death.
     
    TimberWest calls itself Western Canada’s largest private timberland company.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Ferry Named For Viola Desmond, The Businesswoman Who Challenged N.S. Segregation

    Ferry Named For Viola Desmond, The Businesswoman Who Challenged N.S. Segregation
    Desmond received about a third of the nearly 20,000 votes cast in a naming contest for a new city ferry which will go into service this summer.

    Ferry Named For Viola Desmond, The Businesswoman Who Challenged N.S. Segregation

    Stillbirth Offers Another Clue To Possible Damage From Zika

    Stillbirth Offers Another Clue To Possible Damage From Zika
    In Brazil, Zika has been linked to babies born with unusually small heads, a birth defect called microcephaly that can signal underlying brain damage.

    Stillbirth Offers Another Clue To Possible Damage From Zika

    A Look At Some Facts And Figures On Medical Marijuana In Canada

    A Federal Court judge has struck down the law barring medical users from obtaining marijuana outside of licensed producers, saying it violates their charter rights. Here's a look at medical marijuana:

    A Look At Some Facts And Figures On Medical Marijuana In Canada

    Judge Named For Trial Of Pair Accused Of Plotting To Shoot Halifax Shoppers

    Judge Named For Trial Of Pair Accused Of Plotting To Shoot Halifax Shoppers
    Lindsay Souvannarath and Randall Shepherd didn't speak or show emotion as they sat in court during the hearing.

    Judge Named For Trial Of Pair Accused Of Plotting To Shoot Halifax Shoppers

    Ontario's Net Debt Expected To Exceed $300 Billion In Thursday's Budget

    Low oil prices and a weaker loonie have helped Ontario lead the country in economic growth, but the province has the largest debt of any sub-national government in the world.

    Ontario's Net Debt Expected To Exceed $300 Billion In Thursday's Budget

    Saskatchewan Unveils Plan To Reduce Poverty, Including More Housing, Health Care

    Saskatchewan Unveils Plan To Reduce Poverty, Including More Housing, Health Care
    Social Services Minister Donna Harpauer says Saskatchewan's poverty rate is at 10.6 per cent, or 107,000 people, down from about 14 per cent in 2006.

    Saskatchewan Unveils Plan To Reduce Poverty, Including More Housing, Health Care