Close X
Wednesday, January 8, 2025
ADVT 
National

Rogers activates new cellular towers on B.C.'s Highway of Tears to boost 911 access

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 30 Dec, 2024 04:47 PM
  • Rogers activates new cellular towers on B.C.'s Highway of Tears to boost 911 access

Telecom giant Rogers Communications says it has activated five new cellular towers along British Columbia’s Highway of Tears, marking the "substantial completion" of efforts to improve access to 911 services on the route.

Rogers says in a statement that the new cellular towers along Highway 16 in northern B.C. will cover 166 kilometres where wireless service gaps previously existed.

The company says that when the final two out of 11 towers are erected, the new wireless coverage will "ensure continuous coverage" on the entire 720-kilometre stretch of highway from Prince George to Prince Rupert.

The company says the towers will provide 911 access for all travellers and 5G wireless coverage to its customers.

Rogers chief technology officer Mark Kennedy says in the statement that the nine active towers have closed "most of the wireless gap between Prince Rupert and Prince George" and will benefit both travellers and residents in the region, including those in Indigenous communities.

The Highway 16 corridor between the two cities is known as the Highway of Tears due to dozens of Indigenous women and girls having been murdered or have gone missing along the route. 

Rogers says the project, when complete, will fulfil one of the recommendations in the Highway of Tears Symposium report submitted in 2006 that suggested that "motorists and hitchhikers have closer access to a form of emergency communication" between communities on the highway.

Activist Mary Teegee says in the statement issued by Rogers that the new cellular towers are "lifelines for the north" and establish vital communication networks along Highway 16.

MORE National ARTICLES

What is a trade deficit — and does it matter to the economy

What is a trade deficit — and does it matter to the economy
In a post on Truth Social early Wednesday, Donald Trump claimed his country is financially supporting its northern neighbour. The U.S. president-elect wrote that “we subsidize Canada to the tune of $100,000,000 a year" — an apparent reference to a previous claim about a $100-billion trade gap — and said the imbalance “makes no sense.”

What is a trade deficit — and does it matter to the economy

3 suspects arrested after stealing money from a gas station and fleeing the scene in a stolen vehicle

3 suspects arrested after stealing money from a gas station and fleeing the scene in a stolen vehicle
Officers responded to a call right after 8:30 p.m. on December 16th at Carmel Drive where two people came into a gas station, asking for money and cigarettes, and fled the scene in a truck which they stole from Fort St. James. 

3 suspects arrested after stealing money from a gas station and fleeing the scene in a stolen vehicle

Body discovered in Shawnigan Lake

Body discovered in Shawnigan Lake
Mounties say a body has been discovered in a forested area in Shawnigan Lake. Police say the B-C Coroners Services is also looking into this case. 

Body discovered in Shawnigan Lake

Vancouver Island city looks to attract family doctors with municipal job offers

Vancouver Island city looks to attract family doctors with municipal job offers
Colwood Mayor Ken Kobayashi says in a statement that it has initiated a first-in-Canada pilot project where it recruits family doctors and puts them on the city payroll, offering full medical benefits, vacation and a pension.

Vancouver Island city looks to attract family doctors with municipal job offers

Letters to Santa will be delivered but he 'won't have time' to respond: Canada Post

Letters to Santa will be delivered but he 'won't have time' to respond: Canada Post
Canada Post says letters destined for the North Pole will arrive by Christmas Eve as its operations resume, but Santa Claus "won't have time to respond" this year. The Santa letters program is back on after a month-long strike of more than 55,000 postal workers, and Canada Post says the mailed wish lists will be handled with "special care." 

Letters to Santa will be delivered but he 'won't have time' to respond: Canada Post

Crash involving impaired driver in Richmond

Crash involving impaired driver in Richmond
Mounties in Richmond are looking for witnesses or dashcam footage of a crash involving an alleged impaired driver. They say it happened last Thursday just after 8 p.m. on Sea Island Way at Great Canadian Way.

Crash involving impaired driver in Richmond