Saturday, June 27, 2026
ADVT 
National

Anti-violence program for B.C. health-care workers

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 24 Oct, 2022 01:04 PM
  • Anti-violence program for B.C. health-care workers

VANCOUVER - The B.C. government has announced a program to help reduce violence against health-care workers at 26 hospitals and mental health facilities across the province.

Health Minister Adrian Dix says 320 protection service officers and 14 people tasked with preventing violence will be hired to enhance the safety of nurses and other health-care staff as well as patients and the public.

He says that since the summer of 2021, over 4,400 reported incidents of violence have occurred, resulting in about $7 million in employee time-loss claims, but the impact on workers can't be quantified in dollars.

The BC Nurses Union has been calling for better protective measures for its members for at least 30 years.

Its president, Aman Grewal, says nurses are punched, kicked, grabbed and verbally and sexually harassed at increasingly dangerous workplaces, where injury rates are under-reported and higher than those affecting first responders.

Grewal says the stress and fear at work has been compounded due to staffing shortages as people lash out at nurses for everything from long wait-lists to cancelled surgeries.

MORE National ARTICLES

Unemployment rate falls to new record low: StatCan

Unemployment rate falls to new record low: StatCan
The increase came as the unemployment rate fell to 5.1 per cent, the lowest rate since at least 1976 which is as far back as comparable data goes. The unemployment rate was 5.2 per cent in April.

Unemployment rate falls to new record low: StatCan

Canada to take 4,000 more migrants by 2028

Canada to take 4,000 more migrants by 2028
The agreement also includes an additional 50,000 agricultural workers this year from Mexico, Guatemala and the Caribbean. The federal government is also spending $26.9 million in 2022-23 on measures to address the root causes of irregular migration.    

Canada to take 4,000 more migrants by 2028

Full search ends for boater missing off Vancouver

Full search ends for boater missing off Vancouver
Vancouver police confirm a 46-year-old Surrey, B.C., man has not been seen since renting a motorboat from Granville Island on Wednesday. Police say he was planning to cross English Bay heading toward Bowen Island.    

Full search ends for boater missing off Vancouver

Port Moody Police concerned about a spike in break & enters

Port Moody Police concerned about a spike in break & enters
Many of the break-ins have occurred in parkade storage lockers, where thieves have made off with expensive items.  However, there have been several break & enters to residences, some of which have been occupied.

Port Moody Police concerned about a spike in break & enters

B.C. flood risk means be ready to leave: officials

B.C. flood risk means be ready to leave: officials
In central B.C., flood watches have been posted for the Skeena, Bulkley, Quesnel and Horsefly rivers and their tributaries, while a high streamflow advisory is in place for a 600-kilometre stretch of the Fraser River, from Quesnel through Metro Vancouver to the ocean.

B.C. flood risk means be ready to leave: officials

Former Liberal MP on trial for breach of trust

Former Liberal MP on trial for breach of trust
Raj Grewal parted ways with the Liberals in the fall of 2018 just three years after first being elected, and he later acknowledged having a gambling addiction. In September 2020 he was charged by the RCMP with four counts of breach of trust and one of fraud over $5,000.

Former Liberal MP on trial for breach of trust