Wednesday, February 11, 2026
ADVT 
National

B.C. woman collapses after mask confrontation

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 25 Nov, 2020 08:39 PM
  • B.C. woman collapses after mask confrontation

A hotel worker in Nelson, B.C., suffered a heart attack shortly after a confrontation with a patron who refused to wear a mask and wouldn't leave the hotel's coffee shop.

Rob Little, manager of The Adventure Hotel, says it happened last Friday when their accountant was called to help deal with a man who was shouting and ignoring new provincial rules to wear a mask to slow the spread of COVID-19.

Little says when the woman intervened, the man spat on her and walked away.

Police were called and Little says about 90 minutes later, the accountant, who's in her 50s, collapsed from a heart attack that required her immediate transfer to hospital in Kelowna.

Nelson police say the man was taken into custody and is banned from the coffee shop pending a court appearance on an assault charge, while officers try to determine if there's a connection between the spitting incident and the woman's heart attack.

Little says his co-worker is conscious and able to speak with family but remains in intensive care "fighting for her life."

He says polarizing views about wearing masks during the pandemic are disappointing and frustrating, especially in the usually laid-back, friendly city of Nelson.

"We are already dealing with so much, with what is going on, that this is just adding fuel to a fire that doesn't need to be there," says Little.

B.C. announced last week that masks are mandatory in all public spaces and solicitor general Mike Farnworth unveiled new penalties on Tuesday for anyone ignoring the order.

Violators are subject to a $230 fine, although anyone unable to put on or remove a mask without assistance is exempt from the new rules.

MORE National ARTICLES

Vancouver Police survey shows heightened crime concern in Vancouver

Vancouver Police survey shows heightened crime concern in Vancouver
Seventy-eight per cent of respondents were concerned about crime in Vancouver. This number grew to 84 per cent for people living in downtown Vancouver and to 94 per cent for respondents who had been a victim of crime in the past year.

Vancouver Police survey shows heightened crime concern in Vancouver

B.C. extends pandemic rent freeze to next July

B.C. extends pandemic rent freeze to next July
In one of its first acts since being re-elected on Oct. 24, Premier John Horgan's New Democrat government has extended the freeze on rent increases until July 10, 2021.

B.C. extends pandemic rent freeze to next July

Pfizer says COVID-19 vaccine is looking 90% effective

Pfizer says COVID-19 vaccine is looking 90% effective
Pfizer, which is developing the vaccine with its German partner BioNTech, now is on track to apply later this month for emergency-use approval from the U.S. Food and Drug Administration. 

Pfizer says COVID-19 vaccine is looking 90% effective

Terry Fox on shortlist for new $5 bill

Terry Fox on shortlist for new $5 bill
Fox is among the eight names the Bank of Canada has sent to the government as it considers who should be featured on the bank note when it gets a redesign next year.

Terry Fox on shortlist for new $5 bill

PM pledges $1.75B to boost high-speed internet

PM pledges $1.75B to boost high-speed internet
The Universal Broadband Fund that was part of the Liberal budget announcement in early 2019, months before last year's federal election, has taken longer than expected to be officially launched.

PM pledges $1.75B to boost high-speed internet

Canada ready to fight U.S. protectionism: Trudeau

Canada ready to fight U.S. protectionism: Trudeau
Trudeau says in an Ottawa news conference today that U.S. barriers to Canadian imports hurt Canadian businesses and workers but they hurt Americans, too.

Canada ready to fight U.S. protectionism: Trudeau