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B.C. Researchers Develop Eco-friendly, Affordable, Quake-Resistant Concrete

The Canadian Press, 10 Oct, 2017 03:49 PM
    VANCOUVER — Researchers in British Columbia have developed a spray-on concrete they say will protect schools from even the strongest earthquakes and cut the cost of seismic retrofits in half.
     
    The new material will be used in the next few months to seismically upgrade a Vancouver elementary school and researchers say they hope to expand the application to other buildings around the province.
     
    Salman Soleimani-Dashtaki, a PhD candidate at the University of British Columbia, says spraying a 10-millimetre layer of the fibre-reinforced concrete on a masonry wall kept it from crumbling in a simulation that mimicked the magnitude 9 quake that hit Japan in 2011.
     
    He says fibres allow the material to behave more like steel and it's more environmentally friendly than traditional concrete because 70 per cent of the cement used to make it is replaced with fly ash, an industrial byproduct.
     
    UBC President Santa Ono says the innovation will allow the B.C. government to reinforce double the number of schools for the same price.
     
    B.C. Advanced Education Minister Melanie Mark says the new technology will have a far-reaching impact and could save the lives of people not only in B.C. but around the world.

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    'It Hurts:' Family Angry Over Jailing, Shackling Of Sex Assault Victim

    EDMONTON — The family of an indigenous sex assault victim who was jailed and shackled while testifying against her attacker is angry about how she was treated by Alberta's justice system and wants the man to spend the rest of his life in jail.

    'It Hurts:' Family Angry Over Jailing, Shackling Of Sex Assault Victim

    B.C.'s NDP-Green Agreement Required Reading Ahead Of Likely Minority Government

    B.C.'s NDP-Green Agreement Required Reading Ahead Of Likely Minority Government
    VICTORIA — The recently signed New Democrat and Green party manifesto to form what is likely to result in British Columbia's first minority government in sixty-five years has become required reading for business, social and labour groups.

    B.C.'s NDP-Green Agreement Required Reading Ahead Of Likely Minority Government

    First Supervised Injection Site To Open In Surrey But Some Say They Won't Use It

    First Supervised Injection Site To Open In Surrey But Some Say They Won't Use It
    SURREY, B.C. — Drug users will start injecting their own heroin or other illicit substances at a new supervised injection site opening this week in Surrey, B.C., in efforts to curb a crisis in overdose deaths.

    First Supervised Injection Site To Open In Surrey But Some Say They Won't Use It

    B.C. Veterinary Group Sorry For Discrimination Against South Asian Members

    B.C. Veterinary Group Sorry For Discrimination Against South Asian Members
    The College of Veterinarians of British Columbia was ordered to pay each doctor between $2,000 and $35,000 for "injury to dignity," plus thousands of dollars for loss of salaries and expenses.

    B.C. Veterinary Group Sorry For Discrimination Against South Asian Members

    Man Found Guilty Of Manslaughter For Fatal Stabbing In Whistler, B.C.

    Man Found Guilty Of Manslaughter For Fatal Stabbing In Whistler, B.C.
    Clara and Mitch Gordic were in B.C. Supreme Court on Tuesday as 20-year-old Arvin Golic was found guilty of manslaughter in the death of their son.

    Man Found Guilty Of Manslaughter For Fatal Stabbing In Whistler, B.C.

    New Safe Injection Site Prepares For Opening In Surrey, B.C.

    SafePoint will be British Columbia's first such site outside of Vancouver that allows people to shoot up drugs under medical supervision while they are linked up with other health and social services.

    New Safe Injection Site Prepares For Opening In Surrey, B.C.