Friday, July 3, 2026
ADVT 
National

Courtenay In 'Shock' After Mother, Baby Pulled From River: Mayor

The Canadian Press, 02 Feb, 2015 12:40 PM
    COURTENAY, B.C. — The mayor of Courtenay, B.C., says the community is in a "state of shock" after a mother and her seven-month-old baby were pulled from a river.
     
    Mayor Larry Jangula said the death of the 26-year-old mother is a terrible loss for the Vancouver Island city, where police are still trying to piece together what happened.
     
    "Our hearts, and the whole community's heart goes out to the family involved," he said by phone on Sunday. "This will be a terrible blow, and we're all feeling their pain in our own way."
     
    The woman was pronounced dead just before 7 p.m. on Friday evening, hours after being pulled from the frigid Puntledge River. Her infant son remains in critical condition in B.C. Children's Hospital in Vancouver.
     
    Jangula said RCMP and search and rescue crews appeared to mobilize as quickly as they could to save the pair, after witnesses spotted them floating in the fast-flowing waters near the Condensory Bridge.
     
    He said there have not been problems before in that spot involving pedestrians falling into the river, and most accidents that occur there involve people swimming or tubing in the summer.
     
    RCMP have not yet determined how the pair wound up in the water, although they believe a vehicle parked near the bridge belonged to the mother. The B.C. Coroners Service has assumed a lead role in the investigation and the woman's name has not been released.
     
    The mayor said the tragedy hit close to home for him, as he was a Courtenay RCMP officer for 27 years before retiring in 1994. Incidents involving children are always the hardest for Mounties to deal with, he said.
     
    "It's bad enough when we have fatalities on the highway ... and even people dying in violent criminal situations, but whenever there's a situation involving children, it's extremely, extremely difficult," he said.
     
    "Everybody sees their own children or their own grandchildren and it's very hard."

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Silicon Valley North: Vancouver tech surges as U.S. immigration reform idles

    Silicon Valley North: Vancouver tech surges as U.S. immigration reform idles
    Software engineer Pablo Guana nearly refused a job with Facebook when the company redirected him to Vancouver from Silicon Valley because his United States visa...

    Silicon Valley North: Vancouver tech surges as U.S. immigration reform idles

    Patient in Brampton hospital isolation unit tests negative for Ebola

    Patient in Brampton hospital isolation unit tests negative for Ebola
    A patient who was placed in the Isolation unit of a Toronto-area hospital has tested negative for the often deadly Ebola virus....

    Patient in Brampton hospital isolation unit tests negative for Ebola

    From Rob Ford references to embarrassing typos: Winnipeg's mayoral race is on

    From Rob Ford references to embarrassing typos: Winnipeg's mayoral race is on
    With a controversial bikini photo, an admiration for Toronto Mayor Rob Ford and the misspelling of a candidate's name, the Winnipeg mayoral race has...

    From Rob Ford references to embarrassing typos: Winnipeg's mayoral race is on

    Environment Canada testing radar software to combat wind farm clutter

    Environment Canada testing radar software to combat wind farm clutter
    Environment Canada is preparing to roll out new radar technology in order to combat wind farm clutter, which clouds weather forecasts, misleads meteorologists and can even block radar signals....

    Environment Canada testing radar software to combat wind farm clutter

    Three Dead After Plane Crash in Northwestern Ontario

    Three Dead After Plane Crash in Northwestern Ontario
    KENORA, Ont. - Ontario Provincial police say three people have died in a plane crash in northwestern Ontario.

    Three Dead After Plane Crash in Northwestern Ontario

    Flow from breach B.C. Tailings pond in Cariboo region has been reduce: Province

    Flow from breach B.C. Tailings pond in Cariboo region has been reduce: Province
    LIKELY, B.C. - British Columbia says there has been a dramatic drop in the amount of material leaking from a breached tailings pond that contaminated waterways in the province's Cariboo region.

    Flow from breach B.C. Tailings pond in Cariboo region has been reduce: Province