Thursday, June 18, 2026
ADVT 
National

Construction Safety Still A Concern, 35 Years After Fatal Accident: BC Fed

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 07 Jan, 2016 11:42 AM
    VANCOUVER — The B.C. Federation of Labour says workers are safer than they were 35 years ago when four men died in a construction accident in downtown Vancouver.
     
    But federation president Irene Lanzinger says more still needs to be done since the men fell 36 floors to their deaths on Jan. 7, 1981.
     
    She says labour organizations mark the tragedy every year as a reminder that the safety of workers can never be compromised.
     
    Statistics over the last decade show fatal accidents or occupational diseases have killed an average of 32 general construction workers annually.
     
    Lanzinger says more than 1,000 construction workers have died in British Columbia in the three-and-a-half decades since the Vancouver accident.
     
    Gunther Couvreux, Brian Stevenson, Donald Davies and Yrijo Mitrunen, all between the ages of 21 and 49, died when a platform hanging off the side of the partially-built Bentall Tower collapsed.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Animal Activists Upset With Trophy Hunting Show Planned Planned For Trophy Hunting Show In Toronto

    Animal Activists Upset With Trophy Hunting Show Planned Planned For Trophy Hunting Show In Toronto
    Several animal rights groups are planning to protest the African Hunting Events show at a suburban Holiday Inn in mid-January.

    Animal Activists Upset With Trophy Hunting Show Planned Planned For Trophy Hunting Show In Toronto

    Ottawa May Want To Consider Targeted Steps To Cool Mortgage Borrowing: Report

    OTTAWA — The federal government may want to consider targeted steps to "lean against" the shift toward significantly bigger mortgages, a new report by the C.D. Howe Institute suggests.

    Ottawa May Want To Consider Targeted Steps To Cool Mortgage Borrowing: Report

    Canadian Tire Takes Aim At Wal-Mart In Latest Christmas Light Troubles

    A Federal Court claim filed by Canadian Tire alleges that Wal-Mart worked with two Taiwanese companies to copy the construction and packaging of its Noma Quick-Clip lights.

    Canadian Tire Takes Aim At Wal-Mart In Latest Christmas Light Troubles

    Booze Still Drug Of Choice Among Grade 7-12 Students In Ontario, Survey Finds

    Booze Still Drug Of Choice Among Grade 7-12 Students In Ontario, Survey Finds
    The 2015 survey found that 29 per cent of 12th-graders reported engaging in hazardous drinking, and more than a quarter of adolescents said they were allowed to imbibe at home with friends.

    Booze Still Drug Of Choice Among Grade 7-12 Students In Ontario, Survey Finds

    Scientists Knew They Had 1st Test-tube Puppies In The World When The Mutts Wiggled And Cried

    Scientists Knew They Had 1st Test-tube Puppies In The World When The Mutts Wiggled And Cried
    LOS ANGELES — A team of veterinarians, scientists and lab workers gathered around a surrogate hound and watched her give birth to seven half-pound puppies, the first dogs ever conceived in a test tube.

    Scientists Knew They Had 1st Test-tube Puppies In The World When The Mutts Wiggled And Cried

    Vancouver's Rajiv Dixit And Toronto Man Arrested In $93-Million Pyramid Scheme 'Banners Broker'

    Vancouver's Rajiv Dixit And Toronto Man Arrested In $93-Million Pyramid Scheme 'Banners Broker'
    Police say the scheme — known as "Banners Broker" — was operated out of a Toronto address between October 2010 and March 2013.

    Vancouver's Rajiv Dixit And Toronto Man Arrested In $93-Million Pyramid Scheme 'Banners Broker'