Saturday, December 20, 2025
ADVT 
National

B.C. Declares State Of Emergency Over Covid-19 To Help Maintain Services

Darpan News Desk, 18 Mar, 2020 10:43 PM
  • B.C. Declares State Of Emergency Over Covid-19 To Help Maintain Services

VANCOUVER - Solicitor General Mike Farnworth is declaring a state of emergency in British Columbia to allow for the preservation of supply chains delivering groceries and other essential items.

 

Farnworth said it will also allow for the delivery of federal, provincial and local resources in a co-ordinated way.

 

"This is an all-hands on deck approach," Farnworth told a news conference Wednesday.

 

The move follows Tuesday's declaration of a public health emergency in B.C. over COVID-19.

 
 

The province announced 45 new cases on Wednesday including a man who lives at the Haro Park Centre in Vancouver, marking the spread of the virus to a third long-term care facility in the province.

 

Thirteen people were hospitalized including seven in intensive care. The total number of cases stood at 231.

 

Declaring a state of emergency gives the provincial government broad and sweeping powers that include controlling or prohibiting travel to and from the province, Farnworth said. It allows the province to procure, fix prices and ration food, medical supplies and other essential products.

 

It authorizes the province to compel any person to render assistance if they are qualified, however, Farnworth said he does not expect B.C. will have to require retired doctors, for example, to return to work.

 

"What we're seeing is what we see every time we've had a disaster in this province — people stepping up and coming forward," he said.

 

"I do not believe I'm going to have to use a power to force people to do what they instinctively know what they need to do."

 

The state of emergency is initially in effect for 14 days and may be extended or rescinded as necessary.

 

Farnworth said supply chains are in "good shape" and he expects that will continue.

 

As the government house leader, Farnworth said he is working to resume the legislature to complete urgent business to expedite the response to COVID-19.

 

In Vancouver, Mayor Kennedy Stewart is convening a special virtual council meeting on Thursday aimed at getting support for the declaration of a local state of emergency during the COVID-19 pandemic.

 

Stewart said the measure would allow the city to take action against people who are hoarding as well as against businesses that have remained open when they should be closed to prevent the spread of the disease.

 

"I am very concerned that people still are not taking this seriously," Stewart told a news conference on Wednesday.

 

Stewart called on the B.C. government to immediately ban evictions and offer help with rent if needed, adding the city's rent bank is overwhelmed with requests. The province must expand a residential tax deferral program for homeowners to cover more households beyond seniors and those with children, he said.

 

"No one should lose their home or become homeless as a result of this pandemic."

 

BC Hydro also announced it was scaling back construction on the Site C project near Fort St. John because of the pandemic, focusing on essential work.

 

And pharmacists have been given the power to provide medication refills to patients without an updated prescription from a doctor or nurse practitioner.

 

The College of Pharmacists of B.C. says this will help patients avoid crowded medical offices, allowing safe social distancing, and will also free up medical professionals to treat more urgent cases.

 

— With files from Beth Leighton and Camille Bains in Vancouver.

 

MORE National ARTICLES

Industry, Passengers Left Stranded As Anti-Pipeline Blockades Shut Rail Service

Industry, Passengers Left Stranded As Anti-Pipeline Blockades Shut Rail Service
Blockades set up by anti-pipeline protesters have forced Canadian National Railway Co. to shut down its entire network in Eastern Canada and Via Rail to cancel passenger service across the country.

Industry, Passengers Left Stranded As Anti-Pipeline Blockades Shut Rail Service

Pipeline Protests Expected Today, Governments To Meet With First Nations

Protests continue as political leaders look to negotiate solutions, while business leaders, opposition politicians and ordinary people call for immediate action to end the disruptions, which have already seen more than 80 arrests.

Pipeline Protests Expected Today, Governments To Meet With First Nations

Truckers, Police Combine Resources To Foil Alleged Heavy Equipment Thieves In B.C.

Truckers, Police Combine Resources To Foil Alleged Heavy Equipment Thieves In B.C.
KELOWNA, B.C. - The efforts of a few commercial truck drivers and multiple RCMP detachments in northern B.C. led to the recovery of a stolen piece of heavy equipment and the arrest of two suspects.    

Truckers, Police Combine Resources To Foil Alleged Heavy Equipment Thieves In B.C.

Police Arrest Ontario-Based Married Couple Accused Of Being 'Money Mules' In CRA Scam

Police Arrest Ontario-Based Married Couple Accused Of Being 'Money Mules' In CRA Scam
Investigators have charged an Ontario-based married couple they say acted as "money mules" in a mostly India-based phone and internet scam.    

Police Arrest Ontario-Based Married Couple Accused Of Being 'Money Mules' In CRA Scam

Canada Doesn't Tell Police What To Do, Trudeau Says Of Rail Blockades

MUNICH - Prime Minister Justin Trudeau says he has no plans to order the RCMP to end the blockades of vital rail links across the country.    

Canada Doesn't Tell Police What To Do, Trudeau Says Of Rail Blockades

Trudeau Tells U.S. Lawmakers He's Confident USMCA Bill Will Pass Commons

Trudeau Tells U.S. Lawmakers He's Confident USMCA Bill Will Pass Commons
Prime Minister Justin Trudeau said Friday before championing Canada's fight against mounting protectionism and the erosion of rules-based global institutions.

Trudeau Tells U.S. Lawmakers He's Confident USMCA Bill Will Pass Commons