Saturday, April 4, 2026
ADVT 
National

Auditor says B.C. avalanche management working

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 27 Apr, 2021 08:34 PM
  • Auditor says B.C. avalanche management working

 A report by British Columbia's auditor general says the province is effectively managing its highway avalanche safety program, but improvements can still be made.

Michael Pickup says in a statement the audit found avalanche deaths on B.C. highways are rare events and road closures due to avalanches are declining.

He says the audit looked at the Transportation Ministry's management of highway safety and the efforts to keep avalanche-related road closures to a minimum.

Pickup says there haven't been any avalanche-related deaths on B.C. highways in more than 20 years and avalanche events are now down to about three per year from a high of 42 in 1982.

He says the ministry has mapped 1,600 avalanche paths, but it's not known when or if two-thirds of those map paths were last updated.

Pickup says the ministry has accepted the audit's eight recommendations to improve highway user safety and reliability.

The audit says the ministry provides timely avalanche forecasts to highway users, maintenance contractors and emergency services.

MORE National ARTICLES

B.C. RCMP investigate child medical distress call

B.C. RCMP investigate child medical distress call
They say the child was taken to a regional hospital where he was in critical condition and not expected to survive.

B.C. RCMP investigate child medical distress call

2nd COVID shot after 4 months in B.C

2nd COVID shot after 4 months in B.C
Seniors aged 90 and up can call to book their appointment starting next Monday, followed a week later by those aged 85 and over.

2nd COVID shot after 4 months in B.C

Risk of COVID death 3.5x higher than flu: study

Risk of COVID death 3.5x higher than flu: study
The numbers put a figure on the severity of the novel coronavirus, which experts have been speaking to since the pandemic began.

Risk of COVID death 3.5x higher than flu: study

"This isn't a wave, it's a forest fire": experts predict rise of COVID variant cases

Experts say the definition of what constitutes a "wave" and pinpointing when it's passed isn't so clear.

"This isn't a wave, it's a forest fire": experts predict rise of COVID variant cases

Feds eye security threats to Canada's economy

Feds eye security threats to Canada's economy
The move comes as security agencies warn Canadians of the rising danger of hostile nations pilfering trade secrets and cybercriminals demanding ransom for sensitive files.

Feds eye security threats to Canada's economy

Link shows COVID-19 load in Metro Vancouver water

Link shows COVID-19 load in Metro Vancouver water
Metro Vancouver, the regional district that delivers water, waste treatment and other services to the area's local governments, says the tool is now active on its website.

Link shows COVID-19 load in Metro Vancouver water