Wednesday, May 27, 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

MLA introduces bill to cap fees charged to restaurants by delivery services at 15%

MLA introduces bill to cap fees charged to restaurants by delivery services at 15%
If passed, the bill would regulate a cap on fees charged to restaurants by third-party delivery services. Currently, these services charge as much as 30 per cent of the total cost of orders.

MLA introduces bill to cap fees charged to restaurants by delivery services at 15%

Brits fear 'damage' if Canada delays trade deal

Brits fear 'damage' if Canada delays trade deal
British trade officials say they are concerned the delay will inflict "damage and destruction" on businesses, and they blame the situation on Canadian politicians who they say can't set aside their partisan differences.

Brits fear 'damage' if Canada delays trade deal

Health workers report burnout amid second wave

Health workers report burnout amid second wave
Gabiniewicz once worked with the woman, a "vibrant" former health worker in her 70s, who told her she had never been hospitalized in her life and that the COVID-19 infection took her by surprise.

Health workers report burnout amid second wave

Reforms for pandemic federal election introduced

Reforms for pandemic federal election introduced
A bill tabled in the House of Commons today would also add nearly two weeks of advance polls in long-term care homes and make it easier to get and deliver mail-in ballots.

Reforms for pandemic federal election introduced

Books, physical rigour stoke hope for Kovrig

Books, physical rigour stoke hope for Kovrig
As much as that matters, Kovrig's wife Vina Nadjibulla says he is also subjecting himself to a strict regimen to strengthen his mind and body because he views that as the key to his survival.

Books, physical rigour stoke hope for Kovrig

Syrian refugees take citizenship oath

Syrian refugees take citizenship oath
Nearly 46,000 Syrian refugees were resettled in Canada by April 2017 and then more continued to arrive under other programs.

Syrian refugees take citizenship oath