Close X
Wednesday, November 27, 2024
ADVT 
National

B.C. Man Fights To Prove He's Alive After Bureaucratic Error Declares Him Dead

The Canadian Press, 17 Oct, 2017 11:44 AM
    KAMLOOPS, B.C. — A British Columbia man who recently lost his mother is fighting for his own life after a bureaucratic mix-up declared him dead.
     
    Bryan Kupiak, who is 65 and from Kamloops, is healthy but says somehow his social insurance number was substituted for his mother's after she died in September.
     
    A death certificate with Kupiak's name on it was issued to his estate.
     
    He says the mix-up has cost him access to his own pension and he has also had to ensure his bank accounts, driver's licence and other important documents and services have not been compromised.
     
    Kupiak has been working with Service Canada and his member of Parliament but says the stress is intense.
     
    He has been told it could take another month or more to resolve the problem.
     
    A telephone call to an official at the old age security office, which handles pension issues, confirmed Kupiak's predicament.
     
    "He comes back on (the line) and I said, 'Tell me, Mohammed, am I dead or alive?' and he says, 'You're deceased.'"
     
    Kupiak says the hardship is especially difficult to endure because he is still grieving the loss of his 87-year-old mother.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Man Admits Sneaking Snakes Over Canada-US Border In Socks

    Man Admits Sneaking Snakes Over Canada-US Border In Socks
    Federal prosecutors in Buffalo, N.Y., say 28-year-old Chaoyi Le faces up to five years in prison after pleading guilty Tuesday to violating wildlife regulations.  Sentencing is set for Oct. 30.

    Man Admits Sneaking Snakes Over Canada-US Border In Socks

    Shopify Shares 10 Per Cent Plunge After Report Questions Company Operations

    VANCOUVER — Shopify Inc. shares plunged nearly 10 per cent Wednesday after a research report alleged the e-commerce platform company operates outside the law.

    Shopify Shares 10 Per Cent Plunge After Report Questions Company Operations

    Langley, B.C., Boy Hurt When Vehicle Chase Between Citizens Ends In Crash

    Langley, B.C., Boy Hurt When Vehicle Chase Between Citizens Ends In Crash
    LANGLEY, B.C. — A 12-year-old boy from Langley, B.C., has been seriously hurt after being run down by a vehicle involved in a chase through a residential area of the Metro Vancouver community.

    Langley, B.C., Boy Hurt When Vehicle Chase Between Citizens Ends In Crash

    Blaze Damages Vancouver Metalwork Firm, Prompts Rescue Of Dogs In Nearby Kennel

    Blaze Damages Vancouver Metalwork Firm, Prompts Rescue Of Dogs In Nearby Kennel
    The Fire Broke Out On East 3rd Avenue Between Ontario And Quebec Streets Near Downtown Vancouver

    Blaze Damages Vancouver Metalwork Firm, Prompts Rescue Of Dogs In Nearby Kennel

    RCMP uncover store of cocaine and 40,000 fentanyl pills in Metro Vancouver

    RCMP uncover store of cocaine and 40,000 fentanyl pills in Metro Vancouver
    Mounties have announced charges against two Metro Vancouver residents in connection with police uncovering a large shipment of cocaine and 40,000 fentanyl pills.

    RCMP uncover store of cocaine and 40,000 fentanyl pills in Metro Vancouver

    U.S. tech workers more likely to job hunt in Canada, study shows

    U.S. tech workers more likely to job hunt in Canada, study shows
    A new study shows U.S. technology sector workers are more likely than those in other industries to job hunt north of the border, and have increasingly been doing so after  Donald Trump secured the presidency and assumed office.

    U.S. tech workers more likely to job hunt in Canada, study shows