Close X
Wednesday, December 4, 2024
ADVT 
National

Recommendations Approved On How To Hand Out Broncos GoFundMe Cash

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 28 Nov, 2018 12:44 PM
    SASKATOON — A Saskatchewan judge has approved a committee's recommendation on how to distribute $15.2 million raised in a GoFundMe campaign after the Humboldt Broncos bus crash.
     
     
    Justice Neil Gabrielson agreed that families who lost a loved one in the April 6 crash should received a $525,000 payout.
     
     
    He also accepted a recommendation of $475,000 for each of the 13 surviving players.
     
     
    Both payouts include an interim payment of $50,000 already approved in August.
     
     
    The judge said he felt the committee was reasoned in its decision.
     
     
    "It's a rare occasion that from great tragedy comes great generosity," Gabrielson said in a Saskatoon courtroom Wednesday. "Such was the genesis of the money raised."
     
     
    The junior hockey team's bus and a semi collided in rural Saskatchewan while the Broncos were on their way to a playoff game. Sixteen people were killed and 13 players were injured.
     
     
    The committee was made up of five people and based its recommendations on discussions with families over the last few months.
     
     
    Jeff Lee, lawyer for the Humboldt Broncos Memorial Fund Inc., said the committee's report was thoughtful, well-reasoned and its recommendations supported by analysis.
     
     
    Some parents had suggested the money be split equally.
     
     
    Lee said there is a big emotional difference between families who lost someone and those who didn't.
     
     
    Lee called the difference in amounts paid "modest."

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Canada 'Deeply Concerned' Over Possible Return Of Rohingya To Myanmar

    Canada 'Deeply Concerned' Over Possible Return Of Rohingya To Myanmar
    OTTAWA — Canada is raising concerns over reports that Rohingya refugees will soon return to Myanmar — the country in which they have been targets of what has been officially declared a genocide.

    Canada 'Deeply Concerned' Over Possible Return Of Rohingya To Myanmar

    Pakistani Man Wants Canadian Law To Give Migrants In Detention Ability To Challenge The Imprisonment

    OTTAWA — A man from Pakistan wants Canadian law to give migrants being held in detention the ability to challenge their imprisonment in front of a judge.

    Pakistani Man Wants Canadian Law To Give Migrants In Detention Ability To Challenge The Imprisonment

    Gear Worth Thousands Stolen From Merritt, B.C., Search And Rescue Team

    Gear Worth Thousands Stolen From Merritt, B.C., Search And Rescue Team
    MERRITT, B.C. — Gear worth thousands of dollars has been stolen from a search and rescue team in British Columbia's southern Interior after thieves broke into a storage facility twice in two days.

    Gear Worth Thousands Stolen From Merritt, B.C., Search And Rescue Team

    E. Coli Outbreak In B.C. Cheese Makes Five People Sick, Prompts Warning

    E. Coli Outbreak In B.C. Cheese Makes Five People Sick, Prompts Warning
    VANCOUVER — An E. coli outbreak has made five people in British Columbia sick and the provincial centre for disease control is warning consumers to throw away or return Little Qualicum Cheeseworks Qualicum Spice cheese.

    E. Coli Outbreak In B.C. Cheese Makes Five People Sick, Prompts Warning

    Mortgage Risks Fading Thanks To Higher Rates, Tougher Rules: Bank Of Canada

    OTTAWA — The Bank of Canada provided a closer look Wednesday at just how much stricter mortgage rules and higher interest rates have helped slow the entry of new households into the category of "deeply indebted borrowers."

    Mortgage Risks Fading Thanks To Higher Rates, Tougher Rules: Bank Of Canada

    One Year After Hiking Injury: Manitoba Premier Brian Pallister Returns To The Wilderness

    One Year After Hiking Injury: Manitoba Premier Brian Pallister Returns To The Wilderness
    WINNIPEG — A year after he was seriously injured on a wilderness hike in New Mexico, Manitoba Premier Brian Pallister has apparently conquered the same trail.

    One Year After Hiking Injury: Manitoba Premier Brian Pallister Returns To The Wilderness