Sunday, December 21, 2025
ADVT 
National

B.C. Man Fights To Prove He's Alive After Bureaucratic Error Declares Him Dead

The Canadian Press, 17 Oct, 2017 11:44 AM
    KAMLOOPS, B.C. — A British Columbia man who recently lost his mother is fighting for his own life after a bureaucratic mix-up declared him dead.
     
    Bryan Kupiak, who is 65 and from Kamloops, is healthy but says somehow his social insurance number was substituted for his mother's after she died in September.
     
    A death certificate with Kupiak's name on it was issued to his estate.
     
    He says the mix-up has cost him access to his own pension and he has also had to ensure his bank accounts, driver's licence and other important documents and services have not been compromised.
     
    Kupiak has been working with Service Canada and his member of Parliament but says the stress is intense.
     
    He has been told it could take another month or more to resolve the problem.
     
    A telephone call to an official at the old age security office, which handles pension issues, confirmed Kupiak's predicament.
     
    "He comes back on (the line) and I said, 'Tell me, Mohammed, am I dead or alive?' and he says, 'You're deceased.'"
     
    Kupiak says the hardship is especially difficult to endure because he is still grieving the loss of his 87-year-old mother.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    HIV-positive Abbotsford Man Faces 9 New Charges For Allegedly Not Disclosing Status

    HIV-positive Abbotsford Man Faces 9 New Charges For Allegedly Not Disclosing Status
    More Charges Against Man Accused Of Failing To Reveal His HIV-Positive Status

    HIV-positive Abbotsford Man Faces 9 New Charges For Allegedly Not Disclosing Status

    Some Background On The New Speaker Of The B.C. Legislature

    Some Background On The New Speaker Of The B.C. Legislature
    VICTORIA — Political observers were surprised Friday when Opposition Liberal member Darryl Plecas accepted the role of Speaker, despite earlier reassurances he'd given that he would not consider the position. 

    Some Background On The New Speaker Of The B.C. Legislature

    Media Diversity Initiative Among B.C. Gender-equality Projects To Get Cash

    Media Diversity Initiative Among B.C. Gender-equality Projects To Get Cash
    VANCOUVER — A project to increase diversity in Vancouver's news media is among seven gender-equality initiatives in British Columbia that have received a total of $2.2 million in federal funding.

    Media Diversity Initiative Among B.C. Gender-equality Projects To Get Cash

    B.C.'s Minority Government Tables 1st Throne Speech; Promises Finance Reforms

    B.C.'s Minority Government Tables 1st Throne Speech; Promises Finance Reforms
    VICTORIA — The goals highlighted in the first throne speech of British Columbia's minority New Democrat government received an added boost Friday after a Liberal member "betrayed" his party to become the Speaker in the legislature.

    B.C.'s Minority Government Tables 1st Throne Speech; Promises Finance Reforms

    Jassi Sidhu ‘Honour Killing’: Supreme Court Says Mother And Uncle Should Be Extradited To India

    Jassi Sidhu ‘Honour Killing’: Supreme Court Says Mother And Uncle Should Be Extradited To India
    In a 9-0 judgment Friday, the high court set aside a British Columbia Court of Appeal ruling that put the brakes on extradition over concerns about whether the two accused would be fairly treated in India.

    Jassi Sidhu ‘Honour Killing’: Supreme Court Says Mother And Uncle Should Be Extradited To India

    Former Liberal MLA Darryl Plecas Elected As B.C.'s Speaker

    Former Liberal MLA  Darryl Plecas Elected As B.C.'s Speaker
    Darryl Plecas has been acclaimed as the new Speaker to referee debates in the province's often fractious 87-seat legislature.

    Former Liberal MLA Darryl Plecas Elected As B.C.'s Speaker