Close X
Wednesday, November 27, 2024
ADVT 
National

'Highway of Tears' getting better cell coverage

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 07 Apr, 2021 07:09 PM
  • 'Highway of Tears' getting better cell coverage

The federal and British Columbia governments say seamless cellular coverage will be provided along the Highway of Tears by October 2022.

Seventy per cent of Highway 16 already has some coverage, but Lisa Beare, B.C.'s minister of citizens' services, says the $11.7-million project will bring cell service to the remaining 252 kilometres between Smithers and Prince Rupert.

The project is set to begin this spring and will add 12 cell towers as well as improve connectivity at three rest stops, with the province and Ottawa each contributing just over $2 million and Rogers Communications picking up the remainder of the bill.

Highway 16 between Prince George and Prince Rupert became known as the Highway of Tears more than two decades ago, a reference to the many Indigenous women who have gone missing or been murdered along the route since the 1970s.

In a separate announcement, the B.C. government says nearly $5 million in cell service upgrades is coming to Highway 14 on Vancouver Island between Sooke and Port Renfrew, with work expected to be complete by late October.

The Highway 14 improvements will bring cell service to Port Renfrew, Shirley, Otter Point, Jordan River and some Pacheedaht First Nation communities.

Maryam Monsef, the federal minister for women and gender equality and rural economic development, says the Highway 16 upgrade marks a milestone for Aboriginal communities.

She told an online news conference it is the first universal broadband cell project being funded that will "primarily benefit Indigenous communities, but it will not be the last."

Both Beare and Monsef said better cell service makes everyone safer.

"Knowing that people will be able to travel Highway 16 without worrying about gaps in coverage is exactly the kind of result we want to see on every community highway and in every rural and Indigenous community," Beare said.

The Highway of Tears Symposium Report made 33 recommendations in 2006, including solving the problem of cellular gaps between the handful of communities along the 725-kilometre corridor.

RCMP files link a total of 18 murders or disappearances to the region, but Carrier Sekani Family Services in Prince George says on its website that the number likely exceeds 40.

 

MORE National ARTICLES

1013 COVID cases for Wednesday

1013 COVID cases for Wednesday
There have been three new COVID-19 related deaths, for a total of 1,458 deaths in British Columbia.

1013 COVID cases for Wednesday

Asian woman followed and assaulted

Asian woman followed and assaulted
A witness driving by got out of his car and chased the suspect, holding him until police arrived.

Asian woman followed and assaulted

Canadian warship transits South China Sea

Canadian warship transits South China Sea
The Department of National Defence says HMCS Calgary passed through the South China Sea while travelling from Brunei to Vietnam on Monday and Tuesday.

Canadian warship transits South China Sea

Man charged in Vancouver Masonic hall fire

Man charged in Vancouver Masonic hall fire
Const. Tania Visintin of the Vancouver Police Department says in a news release that the two arsons in North Vancouver are still under investigation.

Man charged in Vancouver Masonic hall fire

COVID patients in 20s, 30s hit by illness, blame

COVID patients in 20s, 30s hit by illness, blame
British Columbia Premier John Horgan and Quebec Premier Francois Legault have been among those to suggest increasing infections and hospitalizations among younger age groups are at least partly because of failure to adhere to public health guidelines.

COVID patients in 20s, 30s hit by illness, blame

Woman killed in fire at home in Maple Ridge, B.C.

Woman killed in fire at home in Maple Ridge, B.C.
Firefighters found both the woman and a dog dead in the building after witnesses reported they could be inside.

Woman killed in fire at home in Maple Ridge, B.C.