Close X
Sunday, December 15, 2024
ADVT 
National

Manitoba Woman Who Wanted Inquiry Into Asbestos-tainted Insulation Dies

The Canadian Press, 28 Dec, 2015 12:16 PM
    WINNIPEG — A Manitoba advocate for people who suffered from illnesses linked to vermiculite insulation has died of a cancer closely associated with asbestos, her daughter says.
     
    Raven ThunderSky grew up in a home on Poplar River First Nation with asbestos-laced insulation and lost several family members to related illnesses.
     
    Her daughter, Raven-Dominique Gobeil, says ThunderSky died on Christmas Eve of mesothelioma at the age of 50.
     
    In 2008, ThunderSky said she wrote then-prime minister Stephen Harper asking for a public inquiry into Zonolite, the insulation that was frequently made from Montana-mined vermiculate and found to contain naturally occurring asbestos.
     
    ThunderSky was also critical when a settlement was offered in a class-action lawsuit against the American company that made Zonolite, saying the amount wouldn't begin to cover the costs of removing the insulation from homes. 
     
    Zonolite was popular in Canada from the 1950s until the 1980s, and homeowners were eligible for federal grants to install the insulation from the late 1970s until the early 1980s.
     
    "In the past eight weeks it kind of got the best of her, and in the past two weeks she was just bedridden," Gobeil said of her mother's illness, noting she chose to spend her final moments at home.
     
    "Hospitals are where her sisters and parents died and she decided she didn't want that for herself," Gobeil said in an interview Sunday.
     
    Zonolite insulation was used in housing on military bases and on First Nations reserves.
     
    Mesothelioma is a rare type of cancer that is often linked with exposure to asbestos. The World Health Organization maintains all types of asbestos can cause lung cancer, mesothelioma, cancer of the larynx and ovary, and asbestosis.
     
    ThunderSky was also active in campaigning for a national inquiry into missing and murdered indigenous women.
     
    Gobeil said her mother was too ill to fully comprehend the announcement earlier this month by the federal Liberal government that an inquiry will be held. But she said she was able to understand, and was happy, when a second-degree murder charge was announced in the death of 15-year-old Tina Fontaine, whose body was found wrapped in a bag in Winnipeg's Red River in 2014.
     
    "Even if her activism brought closure to one family, that's one family that can rest easy and doesn't have to wonder forever," Gobeil said.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Fatal Hit-And-Run In Langley, B.C., Collision Specialists Called In To Analyze

    Fatal Hit-And-Run In Langley, B.C., Collision Specialists Called In To Analyze
    Police responded around 2:30 a.m. (to the 2900 block of 200th Street) to find a 44-year-old pedestrian had died.

    Fatal Hit-And-Run In Langley, B.C., Collision Specialists Called In To Analyze

    Forecasters Offer Gift Of Fair Weather To B.C.'s Christmas Travellers

    Forecasters Offer Gift Of Fair Weather To B.C.'s Christmas Travellers
    KAMLOOPS, B.C. — Christmas travellers in British Columbia shouldn't face a gruelling trip home if they are planning to drive across the province this week. 

    Forecasters Offer Gift Of Fair Weather To B.C.'s Christmas Travellers

    Increased Pension Contributions Only Partly Offset By Lower RRSP Savings

    Increased Pension Contributions Only Partly Offset By Lower RRSP Savings
    The report noted that there is some reduction in RRSP investments when pension plan contributions are increased, but the automatic increases are a net benefit.

    Increased Pension Contributions Only Partly Offset By Lower RRSP Savings

    Federal-Provincial Finance Ministers Talk About Fresh Equalization Figures

    Federal-Provincial Finance Ministers Talk About Fresh Equalization Figures
    Federal Finance Minister Bill Morneau is expecting to hear from his provincial counterparts Monday about a familiar, contentious subject: equalization payments.

    Federal-Provincial Finance Ministers Talk About Fresh Equalization Figures

    Faded Line To Blame For Close Call On Winnipeg Runway: Safety Board

    Faded Line To Blame For Close Call On Winnipeg Runway: Safety Board
    The board says a WestJet de Havilland Dash 8 was taxiing for departure on Aug. 4, 2014, and was to hold short of the runway because a WestJet 737 jet was on final approach to land.

    Faded Line To Blame For Close Call On Winnipeg Runway: Safety Board

    Little To No Fire Protection In Almost Half Of Canada's Reserves: Report

    Little To No Fire Protection In Almost Half Of Canada's Reserves: Report
    An internal federal government report says almost half the First Nations across Canada have "little to no fire protection" and rely too heavily on poorly trained volunteer firefighters who can't do the job.

    Little To No Fire Protection In Almost Half Of Canada's Reserves: Report