Wednesday, December 31, 2025
ADVT 
National

Alert Ready system expands to flooding across B.C.

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 03 May, 2022 01:31 PM
  • Alert Ready system expands to flooding across B.C.

VICTORIA - An automated alert system will be ready to warn British Columbians of spring flooding and summer wildfires but not yet for extreme heat, Public Safety Minister Mike Farnworth said Tuesday.

Farnworth told a news conference the Alert Ready system is all set for the spring thaw and will be in place by early June for wildfires.

However, officials are still determining when it should be used in the case of hot weather, similar to the so-called heat dome the province experienced last summer, he said.

"Right now there's work that's underway with the Ministry of Health in terms of what the parameters should be in terms of a heat warning. That's something that is coming," he said.

Alert Ready is a Canada-wide system that allows government officials to issue public safety alerts through major television and radio broadcasters, as well as compatible wireless devices.

The B.C. government came under fire for not using the system to warn residents about scorching temperatures, which the BC Coroners Service later said caused nearly 600 heat-related deaths.

At the time, the province said it was only prepared to use Alert Ready for tsunamis and Amber Alerts for abducted children.

Almost two weeks after heavy rains in November began causing fatal mudslides and surging rivers that displaced thousands of people, the government said it was prepared to use Alert Ready to issue flood warnings.

Farnworth said Tuesday that while officials were prepared to use it in some areas if necessary last fall, it is now in place for deployment provincewide.

While the system is co-ordinated provincially, it is up to local government officials to use it. However, Farnworth said that in extreme cases, the province can put out an alert directly.

The alert is only one of the ways that officials warn the public of imminent danger, he added.

"It will not supplant, you know, people going door-to-door. They will still continue to do that. It will not supplant the police going to communities and saying you need to evacuate now," he said.

"It is a tool, not a silver bullet."

A test of the system is planned for Wednesday at 1:55 p.m.

MORE National ARTICLES

549 COVID19 cases for Friday

549 COVID19 cases for Friday
There are 4,483 active cases of COVID-19 in the province, and 201,267 people who tested positive have recovered. Of the active cases, 441 individuals are in hospital and 129 are in intensive care.

549 COVID19 cases for Friday

Suspects charged in English Bay police swarming

Suspects charged in English Bay police swarming
 As officers were trying to diffuse the situation and disperse the crowd, one man was arrested when he began causing a disturbance and refusing to leave. This arrest caused dozen of beachgoers to surround the police, making the situation extremely volatile.

Suspects charged in English Bay police swarming

Anti-Gang Task Force investigation of Brothers Keepers Gang highlights involvement of Punjabis

Anti-Gang Task Force investigation of Brothers Keepers Gang highlights involvement of Punjabis
Several people have been arrested and charged with numerous criminal and drug related offences after a 3-year-long investigation by the Combined Forces Special Enforcement Unit (CFSEU-BC) into a prominent and violent gang highlighting involvement of Punjabis.   

Anti-Gang Task Force investigation of Brothers Keepers Gang highlights involvement of Punjabis

Mink farming phase out planned in B.C to curb COVID19 transmission

Mink farming phase out planned in B.C to curb COVID19 transmission
Dr. Bonnie Henry and B.C. Agriculture Minister Lana Popham announced Friday a permanent ban on breeding mink. Live mink will also not be allowed on the province's nine farms by April 2023, and all operations must cease completely and have all their pelts sold by 2025.

Mink farming phase out planned in B.C to curb COVID19 transmission

Climate pledges risk making Canada 'outlier': CAPP

Climate pledges risk making Canada 'outlier': CAPP
Tim McMillan says that as Canada increases its environmental ambition at events such as this week's climate conference in Scotland, the federal government must work harder to bring the rest of the world along.

Climate pledges risk making Canada 'outlier': CAPP

B.C. woman who killed teen back on day parole

B.C. woman who killed teen back on day parole
Kelly Ellard, now 39 years old and the mother of two children, has returned to day parole after the privilege was revoked in August for what a Parole Board of Canada decision says were indications of drug and alcohol use.

B.C. woman who killed teen back on day parole