Wednesday, December 24, 2025
ADVT 
National

Agencies Commit To Scrutinize B.C. Coroner's Inquest Directions After Mill Blast

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 16 May, 2015 02:15 PM
    PRINCE GEORGE, B.C. — Agencies targeted in a British Columbia coroner's inquest are committing to review a number of recommendations made after a deadly sawmill explosion in Prince George, B.C.
     
    A five-person jury deliberated for eight hours Thursday before it released 33 recommendations and ruled that the 2012 blast at Lakeland Mills was accidental.
     
    The recommendations are directed at a variety of agencies, including WorkSafeBC, the RCMP, B.C. Ambulance Service and provincial, federal and municipal governments.
     
    Jobs Minister Shirley Bond said Friday her ministry will evaluate the situation and then take steps to ensure B.C. workers are safe.
     
    "We will do everything we can to prevent this kind of tragedy from happening again," she said in a statement.
     
    Workers Alan Little and Glenn Roche died from severe burns suffered in the April 2012 explosion. More than 20 other employees were injured.
     
    It was the second fatal blast at a B.C. sawmill within months and raised alarm throughout the forest industry.
     
    Two workers were also killed in the explosion at the Babine Forests Products sawmill in Burns Lake, B.C., in January 2012. 
     
    After the investigation was complete, WorkSafeBC recommended charges under provincial safety laws, but no criminal-negligence charges were ever laid. The RCMP determined within days that no criminal offence was committed in connection to the Lakeland Mills explosion.
     
    Crown counsel decided against pursuing charges, in part because the failure of authorities to obtain search warrants rendered some evidence inadmissible in court.
     
    WorkSafeBC fined Lakeland Mills Ltd. over $700,000 in penalties.
     
    The jury recommended the RCMP develop a policy, guidelines and training for potential criminal negligence in the workplace.
     
    WorkSafeBC, which was the subject of nine recommendations, said in a statement that it will examine each one and provide a written response to Chief Coroner Lisa LaPointe.
     
    Those recommendations include putting more emphasis on telling workers it's within their rights to refuse unsafe work, reviewing whether dust levels could be monitored with automatic sensors and ensuring inspection officers audit employer's health and safety committee records.
     
    A report on the cause of the blast released last year said airborne wood dust caught fire, causing an explosion that triggered more explosions.
     
    An inquest into the explosion at the Babine mill will be held in July.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Two More Cases Of Measles Diagnosed In B.C., Tied To High School Trip To China

    Two More Cases Of Measles Diagnosed In B.C., Tied To High School Trip To China
    VANCOUVER — The deputy provincial health officer of British Columbia says four cases of measles have now been diagnosed and linked to a high-school trip to China.

    Two More Cases Of Measles Diagnosed In B.C., Tied To High School Trip To China

    Prime Minister Harper Announces Consolidation Of Federal Payroll Centres

    Prime Minister Stephen Harper made the announcement today in Miramichi, where he said one facility will be responsible for consolidating the public service's payroll system in an effort to save money.

    Prime Minister Harper Announces Consolidation Of Federal Payroll Centres

    Cancer Victim Won't Get Assist From Poilievre In Fight For Canada Pension Plan Disability

    Cancer Victim Won't Get Assist From Poilievre In Fight For Canada Pension Plan Disability
    OTTAWA — Employment Minister Pierre Poilievre will not intervene to ensure a terminally ill Alberta man denied Canada Pension Plan disability benefits finally gets his payments.

    Cancer Victim Won't Get Assist From Poilievre In Fight For Canada Pension Plan Disability

    Conservative Government To Deliver Its New Federal Budget Later Than Usual

    Conservative Government To Deliver Its New Federal Budget Later Than Usual
    Finance Minister Joe Oliver will deliver the latest federal budget on April 21. The budget — Oliver's first, but the 10th for the Harper government — comes later than usual. The government attributed the delay to the volatile oil price situation.

    Conservative Government To Deliver Its New Federal Budget Later Than Usual

    Charges Against 11 Accuseds In Drug Trafficking Ring In Vancouver's Impoverished Downtown Eastside

    Charges Against 11 Accuseds In Drug Trafficking Ring In Vancouver's Impoverished Downtown Eastside
    Supt. Mike Porteous says federal organized crime investigators and the RCMP assisted in serving search warrants in the city and in New Westminster, Coquitlam, Surrey and Maple Ridge. The total value of the seizures is estimated at $1.8 million.

    Charges Against 11 Accuseds In Drug Trafficking Ring In Vancouver's Impoverished Downtown Eastside

    Divers Find 20-cm Wide Puncture In Coast Guard Icebreaker Hull That Struck Shoal

    Divers Find 20-cm Wide Puncture In Coast Guard Icebreaker Hull That Struck Shoal
    ST. JOHN'S, N.L. — Divers who examined an icebreaker that struck a rocky shoal off Newfoundland and began taking on water found a 20 centimetre-wide puncture in its hull, the coast guard said Thursday.

    Divers Find 20-cm Wide Puncture In Coast Guard Icebreaker Hull That Struck Shoal