Tuesday, December 16, 2025
ADVT 
National

B.C. Prof Hopes Students' Ideas To Retrofit Clothing Bins Will Prevent Deaths

The Canadian Press, 03 Jan, 2019 08:44 PM

    VANCOUVER — At least seven Canadians have died after getting stuck in clothing donation bins and the latest fatality has prompted an advocate to call for the "death traps" to be immediately fixed or removed.


    A 34-year-old man was found lodged in a bin in West Vancouver on Sunday, the fifth person in the province to die the same way since 2015. Last November, a 32-year-old man was discovered dead inside a donation box in Cambridge, Ont., and a man in his 20s died in a similar container in Calgary in July 2017.


    Jeremy Hunka of Union Gospel Mission in Vancouver said the deaths of five people in British Columbia, four of which are still being investigated by the BC Coroners Service, are unacceptable.


    "It's unthinkable, and it's time to deal with this problem," he said Wednesday. "Too many of our guests who would otherwise have a shot at turning their lives around are dying a horrible death inside or hanging out of a bin."


    Hunka said homeless people often try to get items out of bins or use them for shelter in cold weather without realizing the safety risks.


    "People have died, and they have inadvertently become death traps," he said. "It boggles my mind that they're still in operation."


    He said charitable organizations should come up with other ways to collect donations or stop using the bins.


    Prof. Ray Taheri of the school of engineering at the University of British Columbia's Okanagan campus said removing an estimated 2,000 bins just in B.C. may cost up to $1 million and there would be storage problems.


    He said the death of a woman in a bin at a Vancouver community centre last July prompted him to assign his first-year students a project to redesign the containers or come up with a way to retrofit existing ones, which appeared to be the better option.


    One idea involved installing a mechanism that would lock the bins before anything over about nine kilograms was put inside while another required someone to press a button to get items inside a bin, Taheri said, adding that would prevent people leaning into it.


    "There's a sense of urgency involved," he said of the student competition for a solution.


    Various organizations in the Vancouver area use different types of bins and Taheri has looked at all of them.


    "Definitely, the designs on all of the bins I've seen, they do not accommodate for 'What if someone tries to get inside?' "


    Fourth-year students would complete the winning project and companies that operate the bins would be provided with a kit including a manual allowing them to get parts manufactured so the containers are no longer a problem, Taheri said.


    He said he contacted the Developmental Disabilities Association, which operates 400 bins, including one in which a woman died last summer, to try and prevent future problems.


    Jerry Dobrovolny, general manager of engineering services for the City of Vancouver, said the bin, which has a self-closing door, was removed by the association at the request of the Vancouver Park Board.


    However, similar bins located near city streets were required to be removed by Nov. 30, and most have since been taken away, he said.


    Kevin Chan, spokesman for the association, said donated clothes are sold to a popular thrift store, with proceeds going toward helping about 1,600 people in the Vancouver area.


    The association also picks up clothing at homes but Chan said the profits are not as high using that method.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    No Charges Against Abbotsford Officer Accused Of Theft: Prosecution Service

    VICTORIA — A British Columbia police officer will not be charged over an allegation he stole cash during a drug raid in Abbotsford last year, even though the provincial prosecution service says the officer's actions are "concerning."

    No Charges Against Abbotsford Officer Accused Of Theft: Prosecution Service

    Early Data Suggests No Spike In Pot-Impaired Driving After Legalization: Police

     Canadian police have not seen a spike in cannabis-impaired driving one month since legalization, but there needs to be more awareness of laws around storing marijuana in vehicles and passengers smoking weed

    Early Data Suggests No Spike In Pot-Impaired Driving After Legalization: Police

    'He's Got A Hold Of Me:' Woman Says She Was Groped By Manitoba Politician Cliff Graydon

    'He's Got A Hold Of Me:' Woman Says She Was Groped By Manitoba Politician  Cliff Graydon
    WINNIPEG — A longtime Manitoba Progressive Conservative party member and volunteer says she was groped by a legislature member ousted from government caucus last month over inappropriate remarks to female staff.

    'He's Got A Hold Of Me:' Woman Says She Was Groped By Manitoba Politician Cliff Graydon

    Newfoundland Woman's Search For Missing California Couple Comes To Difficult End

    Newfoundland Woman's Search For Missing California Couple Comes To Difficult End
    A Newfoundland woman who launched a desperate bid to find family members missing thousands of kilometres away in a fire-ravaged California town says the search has come to a difficult end.

    Newfoundland Woman's Search For Missing California Couple Comes To Difficult End

    Russian Aggression And Cyberwarfare Key Issues For Canada To Confront: Harjit Sajjan

    Russian Aggression And Cyberwarfare Key Issues For Canada To Confront: Harjit Sajjan
    HALIFAX — Defence Minister Harjit Sajjan says Russia's disruptive behaviour on the world stage will be among the key issues discussed this weekend at an international defence and security conference in Halifax.

    Russian Aggression And Cyberwarfare Key Issues For Canada To Confront: Harjit Sajjan

    Plane Crash-Lands In Newfoundland With 51 People Aboard, No Injuries Reported

    STEPHENVILLE, N.L. — A man onboard a plane that made an emergency landing at an airport in western Newfoundland Thursday says passengers became nervous after they were asked to brace themselves in a crash position.

    Plane Crash-Lands In Newfoundland With 51 People Aboard, No Injuries Reported