Friday, May 3, 2024
ADVT 
National

B.C. job safety agency warns about flood repairs

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 07 Dec, 2021 02:49 PM
  • B.C. job safety agency warns about flood repairs

VICTORIA - British Columbia's worker protection agency says employers and employees should be aware of the hazards at job sites as the massive repair and recovery work begins after a series of torrential storms.

WorkSafeBC says while the hazards may be different depending on the area, potential problems include building materials with asbestos, chemical or biological contamination, structural or electrical damage and animal carcasses.

Barry Nakahara, the agency's senior prevention services field manager, couldn't estimate the size of the job ahead, but says restoration companies have many examples of post-disaster cleanup to refer to, including hurricane Katrina in New Orleans in 2005.

Numerous homes, farms and infrastructure sites were damaged or destroyed in the series of atmospheric rivers causing flooding and landslides, crippling transportation routes, swamping agricultural operations and forcing thousands of people to evacuate their homes.

Public Safety Minister Mike Farnworth says floodwaters are receding and repair work is starting with contractors, non-governmental organizations and specialized B.C. Wildfire Service teams.

Farnworth was to visit the damaged Interior community of Merritt today but was forced to cancel due to weather problems.

 

MORE National ARTICLES

Delta man pleads guilty to 2020 arson: police

Delta man pleads guilty to 2020 arson: police
Police in Delta, B.C., say an investigation into a fire that burned down a commercial building on New Year's Day last year has ended with a guilty plea. Deputy Chief Harj Sidhu says officers retrieved key information from a digital video recorder that had been submerged in water, through help from the local fire department and municipal engineering services.

Delta man pleads guilty to 2020 arson: police

368 COVID19 cases for Thursday

368 COVID19 cases for Thursday
There are currently 3,020 active cases of COVID-19 in the province and 213,694 people who tested positive have recovered. Of the active cases, 284 individuals are in hospital and 97 are in intensive care. The remaining people are recovering at home in self-isolation.

368 COVID19 cases for Thursday

Commons alone can decide vaccine mandate: Rota

Commons alone can decide vaccine mandate: Rota
House of Commons Speaker Anthony Rota says the chamber's governing body overstepped its authority when it required anyone entering the Commons precinct to be fully vaccinated. Rota has sided with the Conservatives in concluding that the all-party board of internal economy did not have the authority to impose a vaccine mandate.

Commons alone can decide vaccine mandate: Rota

COVID-19 testing confusion at Canadian airports

COVID-19 testing confusion at Canadian airports
As health officials from around the world warned about the new Omicron variant, Ottawa announced earlier this week that all air passengers entering Canada, except those from the United States, need to be tested upon arrival and isolate until they get their results.

COVID-19 testing confusion at Canadian airports

Helijet to add electric helicopters to B.C. fleet

Helijet to add electric helicopters to B.C. fleet
Helijet president Danny Sitnam says the company has partnered with Blade, a technology company, to begin work to build and integrate the so-called electric vertical aircraft into its fleet.

Helijet to add electric helicopters to B.C. fleet

Thief steals package with expensive stroller and uses a stolen Mercedes to commit the crime

Thief steals package with expensive stroller and uses a stolen Mercedes to commit the crime
The theft caught on camera shows a vehicle with its trunk already open pulling up to a doorstep with a large box sitting out front. Within moments, a woman from the vehicle grabs the package and is seen on camera jamming the box into the car.

Thief steals package with expensive stroller and uses a stolen Mercedes to commit the crime