Thursday, July 9, 2026
ADVT 
National

Day of Mourning commemorates fallen workers

Darpan News Desk WorkSafe BC, 28 Apr, 2022 10:11 AM
  • Day of Mourning commemorates fallen workers

Richmond, B.C. (April 28, 2022) — National Day of Mourning is observed every year on April 28 across Canada. Workers, families, employers, and others across British Columbia come together to remember those that lost their lives on the job, and to renew a commitment to creating healthy and safe workplaces.

Today over a dozen ceremonies resumed in person, after holding virtual ceremonies for the past two years due to the COVID-19 pandemic. The Vancouver ceremony is at Jack Poole Plaza starting at 10:30 a.m. and is jointly hosted by the B.C. Federation of Labour, the Business Council of British Columbia, Vancouver & District Labour Council, and WorkSafeBC.

In 2021, workplace injuries and illness claimed the lives of 161 workers. Ninety-nine workers lost their lives due to occupational disease, with 53 of those deaths caused by exposure to asbestos, often decades ago. In addition, 47 workers were killed as a result of a traumatic workplace injury; 15 workers died from a motor vehicle incident; and 13 workers lost their lives due to COVID-19.

“The Day of Mourning is a time to reflect on each and every worker lost and I offer my sincere condolences to their families, friends, and co-workers. Even one injury or death is one too many. Today, we recommit to creating an enduring culture of safety in workplaces, strengthening standards and enforcement, and fully supporting all those impacted by these tragedies.”-Harry Bains, Minister of Labour

Many students across the province are taking part in the Day of Mourning B.C. Schools Project. In its seventh year, this curriculum is aimed at educating students and young workers about their health and safety rights at work.

“On April 28, as we gather to mourn and remember, we also commit to action: to making workplaces safer and to holding those responsible for worker death and injury to account. For the past two years, working people have been putting themselves on the line to get our province through this pandemic. We owe it to them — and to their families — to ensure every one of them comes home safe and healthy at the end of the working day."-Laird Cronk, President, BC Federation of Labour

The Canadian Labour Congress held the first National Day of Mourning ceremony in 1985, making Canada the first country to formally commemorate workers killed in the workplace. In 1991, the federal government passed the Workers Mourning Act, and the following year, British Columbia proclaimed April 28 as the Day of Mourning. Today, it is recognized in 100 countries around the world.

Photo courtesy of IStock. 

 

MORE National ARTICLES

Centre Block restoration to cost up to $5B

Centre Block restoration to cost up to $5B
Public Services and Procurement Canada says construction on the traditional seat of the House of Commons is expected to wrap before 2032, with a cost of between $4.5 billion and $5 billion.

Centre Block restoration to cost up to $5B

Luckily no injuries after vehicle crashes into school playground

Luckily no injuries after vehicle crashes into school playground
A 50-year-old West Vancouver woman is lucky to have walked away with only a ticket, after she lost control outside an elementary school and crashed through a fence, narrowly missing children playing nearby.

Luckily no injuries after vehicle crashes into school playground

IHIT suspect foul play in disappearance of Burnaby man Parminder Rai

IHIT suspect foul play in disappearance of Burnaby man Parminder Rai
IHIT says 33 year old  Parminder Rai a Burnaby resident was reported missing by his family on June 9. He is known to police and has possible gang connections.

IHIT suspect foul play in disappearance of Burnaby man Parminder Rai

Report on grocery pay finds cartel-like practices

Report on grocery pay finds cartel-like practices
The report comes a year after Canada's big three grocers — Loblaw Companies Ltd., Metro Inc. and Sobeys parent company Empire Company Ltd. — all cut temporary pandemic-related pay bonuses within a day of each other last June.

Report on grocery pay finds cartel-like practices

Commons committee calls for overhaul of EI system

Commons committee calls for overhaul of EI system
Today's report also asks whether special benefits, such as maternity and parental leave, should be hived off into their own program, and recommends extending sickness benefits to 50 weeks.    

Commons committee calls for overhaul of EI system

Ottawa pledges $115 million in aid for Venezuelans

Ottawa pledges $115 million in aid for Venezuelans
The continued departure of refugees and migrants from Venezuela is one of the largest external displacement crises in the world with over 5.6 million people leaving the country in the last few years according to the UN refugee agency.

Ottawa pledges $115 million in aid for Venezuelans