Close X
Sunday, December 1, 2024
ADVT 
National

B.C. Windstorm Cost Insurers $37 Million For Loss To Homes, Businesses, Vehicles

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 17 Jan, 2019 07:29 PM

    VANCOUVER — The insured cost of damage from the windstorm that raged through southern B.C. in December is over $37 million, and the Insurance Bureau of Canada says that pushed the price of extreme weather in the country last year to $1.9 billion.


    The storm knocked down large trees and power poles, leaving over 750,000 customers without power, some of them through Christmas.


    The insurance bureau says over 3,000 homes were damaged, boats were scattered and the pier in White Rock was cut in half.


    The bureau says in a news release that as the financial costs of a changing climate rises, it is working with all levels of government to advocate for increased investment to mitigate impacts of extreme weather.


    Those changes could include investments in infrastructure to protect communities from floods and fires, improvement building codes and shift development of homes and businesses away from areas of highest risk.


    Bureau vice-president, Pacific, Aaron Sutherland says the financial costs of climate change are increasing rapidly and the storm is the latest example of the need to improve and adapt to the new weather reality.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    How 2019 Could Bring Canada's First Green Government - On Tiny P.E.I.

    Tiny Prince Edward Island has long embraced the politically unusual: it had the first premier of non-European heritage, the first elected woman premier and the first openly gay male premier.

    How 2019 Could Bring Canada's First Green Government - On Tiny P.E.I.

    Saskatchewan Introduces Minimum Semi-Truck Driver Training After Broncos Crash

    Saskatchewan Introduces Minimum Semi-Truck Driver Training After Broncos Crash
    REGINA — The Saskatchewan government is introducing mandatory training for semi-truck drivers almost eight months after the Humboldt Broncos bus crash.

    Saskatchewan Introduces Minimum Semi-Truck Driver Training After Broncos Crash

    Security Committee Review Of Justin Trudeau's India Trip Finds 'Gaps' In Vetting

    Security Committee Review Of Justin Trudeau's India Trip Finds 'Gaps' In Vetting
    The national security committee of parliamentarians says guest lists for foreign events involving the prime minister get no systematic vetting.

    Security Committee Review Of Justin Trudeau's India Trip Finds 'Gaps' In Vetting

    Scheer Promises More Funding For Police Forces To Combat Gun And Gang Violence

    Scheer Promises More Funding For Police Forces To Combat Gun And Gang Violence
    OTTAWA — Conservative Leader Andrew Scheer is promising more money for police to combat gun and gang violence and says he will audit Canadian jail programs to make sure inmates are ready to rejoin society when their sentences are up.

    Scheer Promises More Funding For Police Forces To Combat Gun And Gang Violence

    Justin Trudeau Criticized For Tweet To Trevor Noah Pledging $50M Charity Gift

    Canada will contribute $50 million to a global charity for children's education, Prime Minister Justin Trudeau tweeted to comedian Trevor Noah, a pledge that quickly drew criticism both for its content and its form.

    Justin Trudeau Criticized For Tweet To Trevor Noah Pledging $50M Charity Gift

    Six People Dead In Separate Crashes On British Columbia Highways: RCMP

    Six People Dead In Separate Crashes On British Columbia Highways: RCMP
    Mounties in British Columbia say it has been a deadly few days on British Columbia's highways, with six people killed in separate crashes.

    Six People Dead In Separate Crashes On British Columbia Highways: RCMP