Monday, December 22, 2025
ADVT 
National

Employers With Workers In B.C.'s Backcountry Urged To Consider Avalanche Risks

The Canadian Press, 02 Feb, 2016 12:12 PM
    KAMLOOPS, B.C. — WorkSafeBC is urging employers with workers in the province's backcountry to address the potential risk of serious injury or death from avalanches.  
     
    Forest industry specialist Carol Savage says businesses often don't realize the dangers workers face in avalanche zones.
     
    She says employers should conduct a risk assessment to determine if slides are likely to occur near their workers.
     
    Savage says that depending on the results of a review, an avalanche safety program may be required.
     
    Three workers have died in avalanches in B.C. since 1998.
     
    Savage says there have also been 47 accepted injury claims in that same period.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Scientists Agree Fracking Can Cause Earthquakes, But How Is Still A Mystery

    A record-breaking earthquake this week in the middle of an Alberta oilfield heavily subject to hydraulic fracking is one of a growing number of such events across the continent, scientists say.

    Scientists Agree Fracking Can Cause Earthquakes, But How Is Still A Mystery

    OPP Officer Dies While On Duty In Orillia, Ont.; Foul Play Not Suspected

    OPP Officer Dies While On Duty In Orillia, Ont.; Foul Play Not Suspected
    ORILLIA, Ont. — Ontario Provincial Police say a member of the force has died while on duty.

    OPP Officer Dies While On Duty In Orillia, Ont.; Foul Play Not Suspected

    A Rarity In A U.S. Presidential Debate: Candidate Defends His Canadian Birth

    A Rarity In A U.S. Presidential Debate: Candidate Defends His Canadian Birth
    Thursday night's debate was a shift from the relative civility between the billionaire and the senator in the days leading up to the Feb. 1 Iowa caucuses.

    A Rarity In A U.S. Presidential Debate: Candidate Defends His Canadian Birth

    Ontario Man Gets Life Sentence In U.S. Court For Multimillion Dollar Pot Smuggling Operation

    Ontario Man Gets Life Sentence In U.S. Court For Multimillion Dollar Pot Smuggling Operation
    The U.S. Attorney's Office says 45-year-old Michael "Mickey" Woods of Cornwall, Ont., was sentenced Thursday in federal court in Syracuse.

    Ontario Man Gets Life Sentence In U.S. Court For Multimillion Dollar Pot Smuggling Operation

    African Trophy Hunting Show North Of Toronto Angers Animal Rights Activists

    African Trophy Hunting Show North Of Toronto Angers Animal Rights Activists
    African Events Canada, the organizer of The Africa Show, says the two-day event in Vaughan, Ont., offers Canadians an opportunity to book trips to Africa where they can hunt animals such as lions, leopards, elephants and hippopotamuses.

    African Trophy Hunting Show North Of Toronto Angers Animal Rights Activists

    Judge Rules Guy Turcotte Must Serve 17 Years Before Parole Eligibility

    Judge Rules Guy Turcotte Must Serve 17 Years Before Parole Eligibility
    Guy Turcotte was found guilty of second-degree murder by a jury in December in the 2009 stabbing deaths of his two children, Olivier, 5, and Anne-Sophie, 3.

    Judge Rules Guy Turcotte Must Serve 17 Years Before Parole Eligibility