Close X
Sunday, September 22, 2024
ADVT 
National

Construction Safety Still A Concern, 35 Years After Fatal Accident: BC Fed

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 07 Jan, 2016 11:42 AM
    VANCOUVER — The B.C. Federation of Labour says workers are safer than they were 35 years ago when four men died in a construction accident in downtown Vancouver.
     
    But federation president Irene Lanzinger says more still needs to be done since the men fell 36 floors to their deaths on Jan. 7, 1981.
     
    She says labour organizations mark the tragedy every year as a reminder that the safety of workers can never be compromised.
     
    Statistics over the last decade show fatal accidents or occupational diseases have killed an average of 32 general construction workers annually.
     
    Lanzinger says more than 1,000 construction workers have died in British Columbia in the three-and-a-half decades since the Vancouver accident.
     
    Gunther Couvreux, Brian Stevenson, Donald Davies and Yrijo Mitrunen, all between the ages of 21 and 49, died when a platform hanging off the side of the partially-built Bentall Tower collapsed.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Alberta Aims To Keep Deficit At $6.1b Despite Low Oil Prices: Finance Minister

    Alberta Aims To Keep Deficit At $6.1b Despite Low Oil Prices: Finance Minister
    EDMONTON — Alberta Finance Minister Joe Ceci says the government's goal is to keep this year's deficit at $6.1 billion despite oil prices that continue to slide.

    Alberta Aims To Keep Deficit At $6.1b Despite Low Oil Prices: Finance Minister

    Brad Wall Saskatchewan Party's 'Strongest Asset' Going Into Election Year

    REGINA — In his office at the Saskatchewan legislature, Premier Brad Wall has a photo of himself with former U.S. president Bill Clinton and a copy of a speech that Wall gave and which Clinton autographed.

    Brad Wall Saskatchewan Party's 'Strongest Asset' Going Into Election Year

    Inmates Lose Appetite Over Quality Of Food Served At Regina Correctional Centre

    Inmates Lose Appetite Over Quality Of Food Served At Regina Correctional Centre
    Justice Department officials say on Saturday morning, more than 60 inmates refused their food trays, complaining the eggs they had been served were raw.

    Inmates Lose Appetite Over Quality Of Food Served At Regina Correctional Centre

    Search Over For Wandering Cheetah, B.C. Authorities Question Person Of Interest

    Conservation officers have called off the search for a cheetah last seen roaming a highway in British Columbia's Interior late last week.

    Search Over For Wandering Cheetah, B.C. Authorities Question Person Of Interest

    10 Dead As BSF Chartered Plane Crashes

    10 Dead As BSF Chartered Plane Crashes
    Nine BSF troopers and a Sashastra Seema Bal (SSB) co-pilot were killed when a chartered plane flying to Ranchi crashed here on Tuesday morning soon after take off.

    10 Dead As BSF Chartered Plane Crashes

    BC Hydro Sets Contract For Controversial Site C Dam At $1.75 Billion

    The contract agreement announced on Monday by BC Hydro will see the Peace River Hydro Partners build the earthen dam, foundation, two diversion tunnels and spillways in the province's northeast.

    BC Hydro Sets Contract For Controversial Site C Dam At $1.75 Billion