Close X
Wednesday, December 4, 2024
ADVT 
National

Crash At Surrey And North Delta Intersection Sends Police Officer, Mother And Tot To Hospital

Darpan News Desk, 24 Jan, 2015 02:39 PM
    NORTH DELTA, B.C. — A pregnant mother, a toddler and a police officer were all taken to hospital as a precaution after a collision in a Metro Vancouver intersection. 
     
    The accident on Friday afternoon took place on the border between Surrey, B.C., and North Delta.
     
    Sgt. Sarah Swallow of the Delta Police Department says the officer was responding without lights and sirens to an assault call and travelling north on Scott Road when a car turned left in front of him in the intersection.
     
    She says nobody appeared to suffer visible or serious injuries but the officer, mother and child were taken to hospital to be checked out.
     
    Swallow says the province's police watchdog was called but at this point the accident didn't meet the threshold for the Independent Investigations Office of B.C. to get involved.
     
    Collision investigators were on the scene and Swallow says police are looking for witnesses.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    How Prepared Is Ontario To Take Back Its Old Job As Canada's Economic Engine?

    How Prepared Is Ontario To Take Back Its Old Job As Canada's Economic Engine?
    OTTAWA — Inside his humming facility on the outskirts of Ottawa, Mark Perry's operation pumps out specialized plastic products — everything from patented storm-drain basins to giant toy guns for water parks.

    How Prepared Is Ontario To Take Back Its Old Job As Canada's Economic Engine?

    What Could Canada Do To Mute U.S. Opposition To Keystone? Nothing, Opponents Say

    What Could Canada Do To Mute U.S. Opposition To Keystone? Nothing, Opponents Say
    WASHINGTON — The American environmental organizations fighting the Keystone XL pipeline say there's no climate-change plan Canada could possibly adopt that would make them back down.

    What Could Canada Do To Mute U.S. Opposition To Keystone? Nothing, Opponents Say

    Bank CEOs Say Their Caribbean Operations Stand To Benefit From Cheaper Oil

    Bank CEOs Say Their Caribbean Operations Stand To Benefit From Cheaper Oil
    TORONTO — A combination of lower oil prices and cost-cutting is poised to help improve the Caribbean operations of some of Canada's biggest banks, a region where they have struggled for years.

    Bank CEOs Say Their Caribbean Operations Stand To Benefit From Cheaper Oil

    Harsh Weather, Heavy Winds Lead To Power Outages Across British Columbia

    Harsh Weather, Heavy Winds Lead To Power Outages Across British Columbia
    VANCOUVER — Harsh weather and strong winds knocked out power in thousands of homes across British Columbia on Sunday.

    Harsh Weather, Heavy Winds Lead To Power Outages Across British Columbia

    Canadian Tourist Under Arrest In Nepal On Child Sex Abuse Charges

    Canadian Tourist Under Arrest In Nepal On Child Sex Abuse Charges
    KATHMANDU, Nepal — A Canadian tourist has been arrested in Nepal on charges he lured a 9-year-old boy to his hotel room and had sex with him, a police official said Saturday.

    Canadian Tourist Under Arrest In Nepal On Child Sex Abuse Charges

    'Unprecedented' Crowding, Multiple Infections At Surrey Memorial Hospital

    'Unprecedented' Crowding, Multiple Infections At Surrey Memorial Hospital
    SURREY, B.C. — Surrey Memorial Hospital is experiencing one of its highest patient volumes ever, as well as multiple infections across the busy facility.

    'Unprecedented' Crowding, Multiple Infections At Surrey Memorial Hospital